I just accessed the coinwallet.eu web site successfully. However, I note that the SSL certification does not show extended validation (green icon on Firefox) like one sees with respectable financial services, e.g. banks, Paypal, Coinbase, etc... If they had extended validation it would show that the certification authority has reviewed their corporate documents. This would show that they are an active business with physical existence, and a physical place where one can serve legal process on the company. For a financial business to operate without extended validation warrants suspicion.

i not support coinwallet.eu because i think coinwallet.eu will not work for long time this can be hacked easily by many hacker i think money will not safe in this wallet there will be many risk in this wallet use this wallet at your own risk time will be tell about this wallet.

Can we even confirm those guys are legit? I don't hear about ppl doing business with them. I just only heard of them being syndicated from the usual btc rag circuit - disclaimer: I'm not omnipotent nor omnipresent I don't know what is out there or what business presence they have elsewhere.

I linked your reply here onto Reddit and decided to also give them a closer look. So far my findings:Their Address on the website is to Felicia Trading , which is a Virtual Office (Certainly No harm nor Foul, just info for everyone else). Looks like it costs them about £586 Per year to do business. Found the Lorem Ipsum Page and its confirmed:Selecting Cash In Mail Reveals the True Address (or at least a forwarder in Canada that suggests for you to mail envelopes of cash):Legit Businesses NEVER allow this because it places unlimited liability on them, their employees, the mail carrier, etc. You can mail cash, but if you attempt to take out an insurance claim against it, it will never be filed and it may be flagged and potentially confiscated. There are reasons that as seen on TV advertisements tell youCan't find any more info about that address listed except for that its maybe a business center with other businesses in the complex.What sort of Exchange lets you buy BTC but you CANT withdraw that purchased BTC?

I opened several accounts and tried to send them my money. However, they never ever reacted.At least, they have in the KYC-section an important text:All you can do: Send them your Bitcoins. That's what I did (some dust). Since then, not a single support request was answered.Instead, they claim to work now with OkCoin, BitFinex, BitMex and TeraExchange, selling BTC-bonds to clients.Still convinced that this all is a fraud.

I opened several accounts and tried to send them my money. However, they never ever reacted.At least, they have in the KYC-section an important text:All you can do: Send them your Bitcoins. That's what I did (some dust). Since then, not a single support request was answered.Instead, they claim to work now with OkCoin, BitFinex, BitMex and TeraExchange, selling BTC-bonds to clients.Still convinced that this all is a fraud.

This is nothing other than a PR stunt to put them in the spotlight. Good or bad press bring traffic to their site and they bargain on this to bring in more business. I sometimes wonder if they would have appreciated the samekind of sobotage on their sites or service? Let's say someone launch a prolonged DoSS attack on their site and it goes offline for a few months... would that be appreciated by them?This could also just be a front for something else... Time will tell, if this PR stunt would backfire on them.

to it just looks like a desperate attempt to get some publicity. which i think is just bringing them hatred. this is going to come back and bite them in the ass after some time though. i wonder if anybody or any group has any plan of performing some attack on their website just to get even because they technically are stress (testing) attacking bitcoin.

Why would they need publicity? They are no real business, just some sort of scamming organisation.What really is weird how "journalists" from CoinDesk act in this case. This isn't journalism anymore, but becoming partner-in-crime.[edit]However, I've filed a formal request with the Canadian and British authorities, for Coinwallet is definitively violating the AML-laws, especially S.C. 2000, c. 17. So by now, the authorities should start an investigation regarding possible violations of the Anti-Terrorist-Act.

to it just looks like a desperate attempt to get some publicity. which i think is just bringing them hatred. this is going to come back and bite them in the ass after some time though. i wonder if anybody or any group has any plan of performing some attack on their website just to get even because they technically are stress (testing) attacking bitcoin.