There is more speculation today that bitcoinâs November 2013 surge and Mt. Goxâs trading volumes were built in part on fraudulent trading activity â specifically via a bot that serious traders have dubbed âWillyâ.
Bitcoinâs price on Mt. Gox rocketed from around $200 in early November to its $1,236 all-time high on 4th December, exciting early adopters and causing analysts to go into fits over the cause: was it Chinese speculation on that countryâs fee-free exchanges? Or perhaps a mass exodus to digital currency after its resistance to government seizure was noted during the Silk Road affair?
The âWilly Reportâ, a one-post default-themed WordPress site, gives a detailed rundown of the suspected botsâ trading activity from around September to the end of November 2013.
According to the blogâs writer, a trader who analyzed publicly-released logs from the time, trading bots ran rampant through the system under various user IDs, including one dubbed âWillyâ that placed repetitive buy-only orders that always manipulated the price upward.
Another bot, dubbed âMarkusâ, appears to have bought and sold at completely random prices, paying zero trading fees. Both Willy and Markus were most active immediately before and during November 2013, when bitcoinâs price suddenly headed moonward.
The analysis is based on data leaked to the public on 9th March this year, which included details of all trades on Mt. Gox between April 2011 and November 2013. No data since that period is currently available, though there are anecdotal reports of activity matching that of Willy and Markus after December.
To November, the two trading entities bought a total of 570,000 BTC, enough to have an impact on price. Was bitcoinâs value in late 2013 even less inherent than sneering anti-crypto economic analysts have claimed?
Speculation now falls on whether the activity is the result of outside hackers gaming the system for profit (like Mt. Gox CEO Mark Karpelesâ claims) or an inside job, representing the interests of the (very) few people with access to the exchangeâs innards?
Both bots were among the 500 highest-volume users on Mt. Gox, whose activities are graphed here. Willy and Markus represent the two most anomalous trading charts, #281 âGreater Foolsâ and #15 âGlitch in the Systemâ respectively.
Markus frequently appears to spend the same low amount of money (around $15) no matter how large the trade, suggesting data in that field is misleading or non-existent.
Odd patterns in the two trading entitiesâ buying behaviour are compounded by suspicious details in their user registration data. Willy had only â??â listed for a country code when all other accounts were identifiable. Markusâ location was listed as âJapanâ, and both had ID numbers unusually high compared to other usersâ.
The Willy entity was also unaffected by Mt. Goxâs downtimes, continuing to buy between 10-20 BTC every 5-10min even at times when the exchange was non-functional to regular users, leading the blog author to conclude:
 âThis makes it likely the bot was being run from a local Mt. Gox server. It is not impossible that a hacker was able to install some kind of rootkit on Mt. Goxâs servers and ran the bot from there, but that seems extremely unlikely.â
The anonymous author of Willy Report does not give much credit to the external hacker theory. Willyâs balance is absent from the balance summary leaked at the time of Goxâs collapse in February, and Markusâ is only 20 BTC. There do not appear to be any withdrawals to match the large trades.
Details of Markusâ activity is curiously corrected in a separate, anonymized version of Mt. Goxâs trade data from April 2013 that matched the leaked version in every other way. The entityâs ID number also appears in that version as â634â â the ID connected to Mark Karpeles.
Suspected manipulative trading activity on Mt. Gox had been a discussion point among serious traders watching the exchange even back in 2013, and was apparently confirmed once the trade data was leaked.
The Willy Report author also suggests signs of suspicious activity in the lead up to bitcoinâs first mainstream attention-grabbing run, in April 2013.
Once again, dark clouds have gathered, not around the bitcoin network itself but around the centralized gateways guarding the on- and off-ramps between it and the legacy financial system.
Such businesses have operated mostly off the block chain and are inherently trust-based, functioning effectively as unofficial and uninsured banks. With developers and executives from the technology world rather than the financial, they have been accused of everything from incompetence to malice before their funds simply vanish â often along with the businessesâ owners.
A trustless crypto-based payment system still relies heavily on trusted supports. More often than not, these âtrusted supportsâ are unregulated, hence they attract unscrupulous traders and speculators.
Those in the pro-regulation camp point to the inherent weakness of unregulated exchanges as one of the biggest problems facing bitcoin, but regulation remains a controversial topic in the bitcoin community and there is no clear consensus on what should or could be done to stamp out abuse.
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