Everything solved.
Your joking right?
What about answering a few of the extremely valid questions from concerned shareholders listed above?
1.) Where is the proof of 3500 shares?
2.) Result of support ticket request with Kumalah (not real hopeful here, kumalah doesn't strike me as somebody who gives a damn as long as he's/she's collecting fee's)
3.) Reducing the overall share valuation is a win for everybody again how? All you've done is lowered the re-entry point for supposed "hacker" (yes, until you show proof). Regardless, it solves nothing.
4.) Have you identified how your system was compromised?
5.) What steps haven you taken to prevent this from happening again?
Highly Suspect behavior going on with this asset imho.
*all of these asset's now claiming they where hacked! We are likely getting Karpelesed here!
+1
Everything is NOT solved. At Cryptostocks, a person's email address is 50% of the information needed to log in to their account (or 33% of the information if the person is using 2FA). As long as Cryptostocks continues to use email address for logging in (as opposed to, say, a separate username or userid), and as long as so many people seem to be having their Cryptostocks accounts hacked (and so many issuers seem scammy), it is not advisable for users of Cryptostocks to share their email address with issuers (and as far as I know, checking the box to share the email address means it is shared with ALL issuers, not just a select one or two issuers that a user might feel comfortable or have a reason for sharing it with). So, a "solution" that devalues people's shares by a factor of 100, and forces them to share their email address if they want to get back to the value they had before, is NOT a good solution. I own one share of WOLFTECH that I bought weeks ago that is now worth 1/100 of what I bought it at, but I would rather write it off as a loss and just never invest again with WOLFTECH rather than share my email address.