May 3, 2024

Who will help the victims of HashOcean: special services or hackers?

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Three separate online petitions were registered by people who reportedly lost theirinvestment in a non-existent mining companyHash ocean. They seek to attract the interest of the relevant departments for combating international crimes of such law enforcement agencies as the FBI, the CIA, Interpol and MI-6.

Three separate online petitions wereregistered by people who have reportedly lost their investment in the non-existent mining company HashOcean. They seek to attract the interest of the relevant departments for combating international crimes of such law enforcement agencies as the FBI, the CIA, Interpol and MI-6.

Petitions filed include: FBI &#8212; EUA:FIND HASHOCEAN.COM (FBI: FIND HASHOCEAN.COM) by Hugo Trombini from Brazil, FBI &#8212; EUA&#8212; CIA&#8212; MI-6 &#8212; INTERPOL: FIND OWNER HASHOCEAN.COM by Adam A. from the United Kingdom and FBI And Interpol Hashocean 700,000 people swindled (FBI - Interpol: HashOcean. 700,000 people were deceived) by Gonzalo D. from the Autonomous Region of Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Argentina. Three campaigns collected more than a thousand signatures.

Hugo Trombini also created a Facebook page"Find Hashocean" where he tries to gain support from other victims of this company's scam. The page aims to “centralize information” to achieve the common goal of finding those responsible for creating the site.

Victims' request for help

Trombini, for example, says he does everythingefforts to contact relevant organizations in the hope of sharing information that he has, including IP addresses and contact details. This information, in his opinion, will help to track and find those who are behind the disappeared site.

His petition says:

“HashOcean website.com went offline and millions of dollars were stolen from approximately 700,000 users worldwide. Since there are no regulatory institutions or reliable sources of information, we decided to open this channel to all users and supporters of cloud mining - people who believe in transparent mining processes. We created this petition so that we can contact the FBI and other similar agencies to find those responsible for www.HashOcean.com. All those 700,000 users want their money back, and cloud mining advocates deserve a reliable process.

If you have lost money on www.HashOcean.com - cloud mining or just a supporter of cryptocurrencies, please help us raise awareness and get expert help to find the people responsible for HashOcean.com. Sign the petition and share this information with as many people as possible on all social networks. Let's unite and raise awareness as soon as possible."

Reasons for creating a petition

In a Facebook chat with CoinTelegraph, Trombini said,that he started the campaign because he had lost about $10,000—all he had—and six months of work. He stated: “I saw that others wanted justice, so I began to seek it myself.”

About why he sent his appeal to the FBI and what actions he expects of them, he said:

“The first thing I thought about was: they have a well-structured department and a large team for this kind of event. Since cryptocurrency is a world currency, I think that they do not want this money to go to finance the drug business and the arms business, just as I would not. I think that many people “poured” all this money into the system, and now they are very sad. ”

He said he would be very disappointed if the FBI didn't find the HashOcean team or decided not to look for them.

Trombini explained:

“If they find them, we will get a worthy example,and we’ll be able to create some parameters that will allow you to determine whether the site or the cloud mining company is a scam or not. We need to set the minimum trust parameters for the website or the cloud mining site, for example, use the registries or something else that will tell us that this farm is working fine. So if the FBI is unable or unwilling to find them, I think that someone else can conduct his own scam without any consequences. ”

Hoashocean.com is now worth $44 million

According to Kypertech hackers, the HashOcean website.com is now worth $44 million and can be used for theft. In response to the claim that a Polish hacker belonging to this group may have hacked the original HashOcean website, a post was published on its Facebook page:

&#171;Woah-woah!So now people are accusing us of shutting down #hashocean, even though we didn’t do anything, we were just trying to fix the situation!?! Our Polish hacker didn't even touch their website until it crashed. People will say anything to get results here and now. We didn't initially hack HashOcean. THEY PARKED THE DOMAIN AND ARE TRYING TO SELL IT AND WE CAN SAY IT IS CURRENTLY WORTH $44 MILLION.”

List of suspicious cloud mining sites

Hypertech advises miners to exercise extreme caution when dealing with such sites.

Hackers warn about other cloud mining sites:

“For those interested, we do not recommend usingcloud mining sites currently. We have already found four more sites that are currently working, but are fraudulent, according to information on the forums, we found them in a deep network. We will provide their list in the near future. Please refrain from posting links to such sites, because we can’t check them all, and judging by the current trend, no site is safe. Even if you received payments within a few months or everything looks legal, we all know what happened when we said the same thing about #hashocean. ”

Author: Olusegun Ogundeji

: cointelegraph.com