The registrant's information is public in the case of fuckday.info, but there is another thing which bothers me the most atm.
I wonder how the US government, to be more precise the USCC, is involved in all this. Their USCC Economic Issue Brief No. 4 "Bitcoins Uncertain Future in China" published on the 12th May 2014 by Lauren Gloudeman is more than suspicious. It almost seems like they were part of preparing this large-scale scam. The timing might have been just coincidence, but the miserable research most definitely was not. The report is obviously propagating Hong Kong "to be primed for Bitcoins successful takeoff as a medium of exchange" (p.15)
Moreover, Lauren Gloudeman uses a map allegedly taken from HKCex.net that shows different Bitcoin ATM locations. Even more suspicious that Cex is ONLY mentioned ONCE in the graphic's caption. No additional word about the new exchange in the whole paper. And it did in fact misguide me provided that it has been one of the main reasons I decided to deposit, ending up tarp'd. While I have to admit that I only scanned the content it was crystal clear to me that the US government would not promote, nor mention possibly fraudulent businesses in such a report.

Source:
http://origin.www.uscc.gov/sites/default/files/Research/USCC%20Economic%20Issue%20Brief%20-%20Bitcoin%20-%2005%2012%2014.pdfCould it be that this whole fraud was orchestra'd by a conspiracy of different Western individuals/organizations trying to fool Chinese into the HKCex scam??? Not as unlikely as you might think now. That is for certain.
By the way, don't you wonder why most English writing BTC news websites kept calm about those $25 million raised, although they have been reporting the alleged investment of $2 million like it has been a huge event back then?
Well, take a look yourself at what is written on pages 13-15 and make up your own mind about all that...