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Wall Street trading giant Virtu is preparing to take legal action against a fake copycat cryptocurrency

This is one for the books, folks.

  • Virtu Financial says a fake cryptocurrency called Virt Coin has no connection to the trading giant.
  • The fake project put out a press release Thursday falsely outlining Virtu's plan to launch a digital token.
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Virtu Financial, the Wall Street trading giant, is preparing to take legal action against a fake cryptocurrency that's using its likeness and claiming a connection to the firm.

Virt Coin, a fake cryptocurrency project, put out a press release Thursday outlining Virtu Financial's supposed plan to launch its own digital token.

"Douglas Cifu, Virtu Financial's chief executive, told Wall Street recently that the company is going to issue the upcoming token VIRT for the trading desk," the release said.

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The claims in the release are completely false, according to Virtu. Virt Coin is not listed on the widely used cryptocurrency data site CoinMarketCap.

"VirtCoin has no relationship, connection, or affiliation to Virtu Financial," the company said in a tweet. "Virtu has notified the appropriate authorities and intends to commence all necessary legal actions to defend itself from any attempt to infringe on its trademarks and intellectual property."

Virt Coin's website sports Virtu's logo in the left hand corner and a white paper uses a font that resembles the shade of green used by Virtu in its marketing materials.

It's not clear if the folks behind Virt Coin are malicious actors or just pranksters. Still, an employee of the firm described one section of the white paper to Business Insider as "hilarious." It uses stock photos of 20-year-olds to show the company's upper management, instead of its actual staff:

Virtu, a market-making firm, is known to have traded in crypto assets, but is a bit more shy about its presence in the market relative to other trading firms such as DRW, B2C2, Akuna Capital, and DV Trading — just to name a few.

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The cryptocurrency world has its fair share of fraud. Copycat tactics — in which fake entities claim to be associated with established brands or people — are especially common. For example, crypto trolls looking to solicit money from gullible passersby have made fake accounts in the likeness of figures such as Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin and Commodities Futures and Trading Commission Chairman J Christopher Giancarlo.

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