In a brazen display of lawlessness, the crypto exchange MEXC Global has transitioned from regulatory evasion to active content piracy. Our investigation reveals that MEXC, primarily through its mutated domain mexc.co, has been systematically scraping and republishing FinTelegram’s investigative articles in their entirety without authorization.
By creating a dedicated “Author Page” for FinTelegram (found at mexc.co/en-PH/news/author/fintelegram/306), MEXC is not only infringing on copyright but is performing a strategic Brand Hijack—using our intelligence to lure users into their ecosystem while ignoring all legal cease-and-desist requests.
The existence of a FinTelegram author profile on a platform we have repeatedly warned against is a calculated move by MEXC to confuse the public and lend a false veneer of “compliance transparency” to their mirror domains.
The MEXC.co mutated domain has completely scrubbed all information regarding its legal operator from its interface. Unlike the primary mexc.com site—which has historically claimed various offshore registrations (Seychelles, Estonia, or the British Virgin Islands)—the MEXC.co platform provides no legal imprint, no terms of service identifying a corporate entity, and no physical address.
The deliberate omission of operator data on MEXC.co is a strategic maneuver designed to create a “legal vacuum.” By operating as a Ghost Platform, MEXC achieves three critical goals for its shadow operations:
.co mirror, there is no legal “person” or “corporation” for the user to sue in any jurisdiction.While the website remains a ghost, the money trail remains visible. Our investigation confirms that the only identifiable corporate footprint for MEXC.co within the European Union is Finetix, UAB.
In essence, Finetix acts as the “de facto” operator for the fiat-gateways of this ghost platform, providing a regulated Lithuanian face to a completely unregulated and anonymous digital interface.
We urge our readers to be extremely cautious. If you see a FinTelegram article on a MEXC-affiliated domain, it is stolen property. MEXC is using our research into the “dark side” of the industry to camouflage its own shadow operations.
“When an exchange starts stealing the work of the very investigators who expose them, they have entered a terminal phase of ethical bankruptcy,” says a FinTelegram legal representative.
Are you an employee of the MEXC “News” or “Content” department? We are seeking information on the automated scraping tools and mirror-server locations used to facilitate this content theft.


