CryptoCISO

Is General Exchange a Scam? A CryptoCISO Investigation

CryptoCISO Risk Verdict
High Risk · Score 80/100
Forensic assessment of General Exchange by the CryptoCISO blockchain intelligence team.

Threat Profile

Operating from an unverified domain, General Exchange advertises high-return crypto and CFD trading to the public. CryptoCISO flagged the operator during routine counterparty-risk screening.

Regulatory Posture

Our licensing review found no evidence that General Exchange is authorised by any competent regulator. References point only to an offshore incorporation in United Kingdom, which grants company status but explicitly does not license forex or crypto trading. That gap leaves client funds without statutory protection.

Indicators We Flagged

  • Cloned or template website design shared with other flagged operators
  • No verifiable licence from a top-tier financial regulator
  • Crypto-only deposits that bypass chargeback protections
  • Withdrawal friction reported – delays, surprise ‘fees’, or frozen balances

On-Chain & Operational Notes

On-chain, platforms in this category tend to consolidate client deposits into a small set of collection wallets before dispersing them across exchanges and bridges. Capturing the deposit trail and counterparty addresses early is critical to any later tracing effort.

CryptoCISO Risk Verdict

On balance, General Exchange carries a high risk profile. The evidence points away from a legitimate, supervised brokerage and toward an operation structured to retain deposits.

If Your Funds Are Exposed

Should you be exposed, halt further payments and ignore demands for upfront fees to ‘free’ your balance. Gather your evidence – TXIDs, wallet addresses, screenshots, and correspondence – while it is still accessible. Early, organised evidence is what makes downstream tracing and reporting viable.

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