So a thief stole million digital units of random hash data from a most likely officially non registered trademark (that does not pay taxes etc) that were held in a company situated in British Virgin Islands but registered god knows where.Yes, FBI has so much to do there.Till all the crypto-coins, exchanges and gambling sites are not fully trademarked and registered (with propper paperwork both in legalization and tax forms and so on) you can pretty much do what ever you wish, and no one except the users will care.

Yep, sadly, there ain't all that much we can do about crypto-theft at the moment.Only effective way to deal with thieves right now is to track down the thief yourselves thru the blockchain and whatever other forensics you may have, then try to negotiate directly (or go round to his house, if you're lucky enough to get a local thief or cheap air travel)You have to commit theft/fraud on a Mt GOX scale before you can get any interest from the authorities. You can report stuff to the cops/authorities, but most agencies aren't all that interested in your missing magic internet money.Hopefully, once crypto gets more mainstream, things will change, but right now......meh.To be fair to Blue Meanie, btw: he didn't actuallythe 1 million NXT. He was employed to work on a project, was paid up front, then ran away screaming and refused to give the NXT back, even though he never even committed one line of code to the project.Heres the full story:and here's BM going completely hatstand about the story, he did not like the truth one little bit...:Some fun reading there.....