History
The company is headed by CEO Nejc Kodrič, a widely known member of the bitcoin community, who co-founded the company in August 2011 with Damijan Merlak in his native Slovenia, but later moved its registration to the UK in April 2013, then to Luxembourg in 2016.The company is registered in Reading in the UK, but this is in fact just the offices of UK PLC, a company specialising in company formation and which, amongst its services, allows companies to use its own address as their registered office, effectively acting as a forwarding address. There is no clear information available as to where Bitstamp's operations are located or whether they actually have any presence at all in the UK, or are still run out of Slovenia. Bitstamp outsourced certain operations to the UK due to the lack of adequate financial and legal services in Slovenia. When incorporating in the United Kingdom, the company approached the UK'sService disruptions
In February 2014, the company suspended withdrawals for several days in the face of a distributed denial-of-service. ''Bitcoin Magazine'' reported that people behind the attack sent a ransom demand of 75 bitcoins to Kodrič, who refused due to a company policy against negotiating with “terrorists”. In January 2015, Bitstamp suspended its service after a hack during which less than 19,000 bitcoins were stolen, reopening nearly a week later.Compliance
In September 2018 the New York Attorney General office produced a 42-page "Virtual Markets Integrity Initiative Report" after requesting fourteen virtual currency exchanges to participate in a survey. The report aimed to create greater transparency regarding security, anti-hacking measures and business practices. Bitstamp was among ten platforms that responded; it is noted that of these ten, Bitstamp was among the seven that confirmed that they had sought approval, directly or through a subsidiary, from the New York State Department of Financial Services (“DFS”) to operate a virtual currency business in New York State. The report goes on to say that such approval implies an agreement to actively protect deposited funds, prevent money laundering and illegal activity, and respond to other risks. Bitstamp was one of two exchanges that claimed to block access to their exchange by VPNs. In addition to providing fee policies, Bitstamp also claimed to conduct audits of their virtual currency holdings.Notes
References
{{Cryptocurrencies Bitcoin exchanges Privately held companies of the United Kingdom 2011 establishments in the United Kingdom Financial services companies established in 2011 Bitcoin Cryptocurrency theft Bitcoin companies Digital currency exchanges