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Italian securities watchdog CONSOB has halted two projects for allegedly offering fraudulent crypto investments.
The Italian securities regulator has suspended two projects for allegedly offering fraudulent crypto investment schemes. The 90-day suspensions were reported in an official statement on the regulatorâs website published Monday, Dec. 17.
The Italian Companies and Exchange Commission â or Commissione Nazionale per le SocietĂ e la Borsa (CONSOB) â is the Italian analogue of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and represents a governmental authority that regulates the Italian securities market.
Both firms suspended by the CONSOB â Bitsurge Token and Green Energy Certificates â are allegedly scam projects from Avalon Life, a company that is not based in the European Union. Both have been banned from offering investments for 90 days, starting from Dec. 12, according to two official resolutions.
Allegedly fraudulent scheme Bitsurge was promoted on the website bitsurge.io and on the Facebook page dubbed "Bitsurge Token." As described in the resolution, the company was offering investors âtoken contractsâ with monthly returns from 6 to 13 percent for capital amounts ranging from $1,000 to $25,000. The CONSOB document notes that customers reportedly did not possess any autonomy in the management of their tokens.
The second scheme, dubbed Green Earth Certificates, was reportedly promoted through the Facebook page "Progetto Crypto Green Earthâ and offered âGreen Earth Certificatesâ in order to protect rainforests from deforestation by purchasing forest areas via blockchain. The alleged scam intended to provide a 6 percent reward on the sum of crypto investments in forest areas â such as Costa Rica â which have large areas of rainforests.
Recently, the CONSOB has issued a joint warning with Maltaâs Financial Services Authority (MFSA) about an unlicensed cryptocurrency exchange named OriginalCrypto.
In mid-November, the CONSOB also sent cease-and-desists to three crypto-related firms for the alleged offering of unapproved investment services.
In regard to the issue of crypto-related advertising on Facebook, the social media giant had previously banned crypto and ICO ads in January 2018, claiming that it wanted to prohibit âmisleading or deceptive promotional practicesâ associated with crypto.
However, the social media entity updated their policy to allow cryptocurrencies ads again in late June 2018, still maintaining their ban on promoting initial coin offerings (ICOs).
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