When OneCoin
announced its OFC ICO
last week, twelve public exchanges were initially featured on the ICO website.

OneCoin claimed it was “contacting” the featured exchanged regarding public listing of their OFC ERC20 token.

Without explanation, OneCoin slashed the featured exchange number to just six within a few days.

Now, of the remaining six exchanges that were listed, one has publicly confirmed it has no plans to list OneCoin’s OFC “Ponzi coin”.

Since halving the listed exchanges it was supposedly contacting, OneCoin has since deleted the listing from their ICO website entirely.

You can still see the “exchanges” section of the website menu, even if now it doesn’t go anywhere.

Seeing as everything else we’ve reported on has disappeared from the OneCoin ICO website, expect mention of “exchanges” to disappear pretty soon too.

But I digress. Earlier today Twitter user Alexis Aiono reached out to one of the featured exchanges, Kraken.

Will these exchanges please publicly denounce any potential partnership with the known scam #Onecoin?

Two which
Kraken Support replied
;

Thank you for bringing this to our attention.

We do not have any plans on listing onecoin nor would we ever list a ponzi coin.

Ouch. One can likely assume the rest of the exchanges on OneCoin’s list had similar reactions, prompting the company to remove its exchange list altogether.

OneCoin meanwhile is hoping to flog its OFC tokens to investors for €0.02 to €0.06 EUR from October 8th.

With public listing of the hastily put together ERC20 token looking increasingly unlikely, it appears OFC tokens will be no different to OneCoin’s original non publicly tradeable Ponzi points.

Which begs the question, perhaps more pertinently than when first revealed,
what is the point of OFC tokens to begin with?

Gullible schmucks can still
directly invest in pre-generated points through OneCoin
, so why waste time with OFC tokens?

Oh right… nobody is investing in OneCoin points directly anymore.

ICO hype to the rescue!


🤖 Quick Answer

# AOP Block

What was OneCoin's initial claim regarding exchange listings for its OFC token?
OneCoin announced twelve public exchanges would list its OFC ERC20 token during the ICO launch, claiming it was actively contacting these platforms for official listing arrangements and market availability.

Why did OneCoin reduce its featured exchange list?
OneCoin reduced the number of featured exchanges from twelve to six within days without providing public explanation, subsequently removing the exchanges section entirely from its ICO website.

Which exchange publicly rejected OneCoin's OFC token listing?
Kraken exchange publicly confirmed it had no plans to list OneCoin's OFC token, becoming the first platform to explicitly refuse the listing despite being initially featured.

What pattern emerged regarding OneCoin's ICO website content?
Multiple elements of OneCoin's ICO website disappeared progressively, including exchange listings, exchange contact information


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