A trader has been confronting an exchange for three months.
In July of this year, A well-known trader in the crypto circle—The White Whale— discovered that his account on a certain exchange was locked. The amount was significant. Over 3 million USD. The exchange's reason was quite "technical": The system detected suspected bot trading. The evidence was—two orders within one second. White Whale refused to accept this. His trading style has always been clear: High leverage, heavy positions, purely manual operations. The system simply equates "fast speed" with "automation." The situation started escalating. The exchange demanded he: Go to Malaysia in person to complete KYC. He refused. The reason was simple: Unclear risk, vague procedures, and not included in the original terms. The account remained frozen. So, he took the battle to the public. Posted a long thread on X. Shared screenshots of trading records. A complete timeline. Even directly offered a bounty for investigation, with a maximum amount of 2.5 million USD, the only goal: Expose issues with centralized exchanges' handling of funds. Soon, things spiraled out of control. On-chain investigators got involved. Veteran industry insiders spoke out. More and more users came forward, sharing their experiences of accounts being frozen without warning. Public opinion pressure surged. Withdrawals noticeably accelerated. After three months, a turning point arrived. On October 31, 2025, The chief strategy officer of the exchange publicly apologized, and the account was unblocked. Funds were fully released. Internal process reforms were promised. White Whale confirmed: The money has arrived. The story should have ended here. But it didn't. He announced that he would allocate part of the funds for community rewards and charity. Meanwhile, the community did another thing. On #Solana chain, a meme coin called $WHITEWHALE was born. Initially just for commemoration. Later, the hype spiraled out of control. To prevent scams, White Whale personally took over the project: Lock liquidity, Make on-chain data public, Introduce holding incentives. Market cap once surged to 50 million USD, then retreated, oscillating in the tens of millions. But the coin itself isn't important. What matters is the meaning behind it. This incident has been discussed repeatedly, not because of the price, nor because of the meme. But because it clearly exposed one thing: In centralized exchanges, fund security and rule interpretation rights are not entirely in the hands of users. This time, White Whale won. But more people began to realize— Not every confrontation will be met with a "We f*cked up." And that's why, this story keeps being retold again and again in the community.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
A trader has been confronting an exchange for three months.
In July of this year,
A well-known trader in the crypto circle—The White Whale—
discovered that his account on a certain exchange was locked.
The amount was significant.
Over 3 million USD.
The exchange's reason was quite "technical":
The system detected suspected bot trading.
The evidence was—two orders within one second.
White Whale refused to accept this.
His trading style has always been clear:
High leverage, heavy positions, purely manual operations.
The system simply equates "fast speed" with "automation."
The situation started escalating.
The exchange demanded he:
Go to Malaysia in person to complete KYC.
He refused.
The reason was simple:
Unclear risk, vague procedures, and not included in the original terms.
The account remained frozen.
So, he took the battle to the public.
Posted a long thread on X.
Shared screenshots of trading records.
A complete timeline.
Even directly offered a bounty for investigation,
with a maximum amount of 2.5 million USD,
the only goal:
Expose issues with centralized exchanges' handling of funds.
Soon, things spiraled out of control.
On-chain investigators got involved.
Veteran industry insiders spoke out.
More and more users came forward,
sharing their experiences of accounts being frozen without warning.
Public opinion pressure surged.
Withdrawals noticeably accelerated.
After three months, a turning point arrived.
On October 31, 2025,
The chief strategy officer of the exchange publicly apologized, and the account was unblocked.
Funds were fully released.
Internal process reforms were promised.
White Whale confirmed:
The money has arrived.
The story should have ended here.
But it didn't.
He announced that he would allocate part of the funds
for community rewards and charity.
Meanwhile, the community did another thing.
On #Solana chain,
a meme coin called $WHITEWHALE was born.
Initially just for commemoration.
Later, the hype spiraled out of control.
To prevent scams,
White Whale personally took over the project:
Lock liquidity,
Make on-chain data public,
Introduce holding incentives.
Market cap once surged to 50 million USD,
then retreated, oscillating in the tens of millions.
But the coin itself isn't important.
What matters is the meaning behind it.
This incident has been discussed repeatedly,
not because of the price,
nor because of the meme.
But because it clearly exposed one thing:
In centralized exchanges,
fund security and rule interpretation rights
are not entirely in the hands of users.
This time,
White Whale won.
But more people began to realize—
Not every confrontation
will be met with a "We f*cked up."
And that's why,
this story keeps being retold
again and again in the community.