# Bithumb's Bitcoin Blunder Puts Burden on Users as Legal Case Favors Civil Recovery > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/world/bithumbs-bitcoin-blunder-puts-burden-on-users-as-legal-case-favors-civil-recovery) > Author: Aaron > Date: 2026-02-11 **A South Korean court ruling shifts the weight of recovering mistakenly credited cryptocurrency onto individual users--raising urgent questions about exchange accountability in the digital asset era.** In February 2023, a software glitch at [Bithumb](https://www.bithumb.com/), one of South Korea's largest cryptocurrency exchanges, credited approximately 2.1 billion won (roughly $1.6 million) worth of Bitcoin to user accounts in error. For the recipients, it was a windfall from nowhere. For Bithumb, it became a legal quagmire that would take years to untangle--and ultimately land the burden of recovery squarely on the users who received the mistaken funds. A Seoul district court ruled earlier this month that Bithumb must pursue civil remedies to recover the erroneously distributed Bitcoin, rather than reversing the transactions unilaterally or seeking criminal prosecution of users who withdrew the funds. The decision has sparked fierce debate in South Korea's crypto community and among legal scholars worldwide: When an exchange makes a mistake, who bears the cost of fixing it? ## The Glitch That Sparked a Legal Battle The February 2023 incident stemmed from a backend system update that went awry during routine maintenance. According to court documents, a misconfigured database script caused Bithumb's ledger to credit Bitcoin deposits to roughly 1,200 user accounts that had not actually received corresponding blockchain transfers. Some users noticed the phantom balances immediately; others discovered them days later. A subset--estimates range from 80 to 150 accounts--withdrew or traded the mistakenly credited Bitcoin before Bithumb identified the error and froze affected wallets. Bithumb initially attempted to claw back the funds by reversing internal ledger entries. When users who had already withdrawn resisted, the exchange reported the matter to South Korean financial regulators and, in some cases, sought criminal charges for theft or fraud. Prosecutors, however, declined to pursue most cases, finding that users who withdrew funds they believed were legitimately theirs had not demonstrated criminal intent. That left Bithumb with one recourse: civil litigation. And here, the Seoul Western District Court's recent ruling set a precedent that exchange operators may find deeply uncomfortable. ## "Unjust Enrichment"--But Whose Burden? Under South Korean civil law, a party that receives a benefit without legal justification--known as "[unjust enrichment](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unjust_enrichment)"--may be required to return it. Bithumb argued that the mistakenly credited Bitcoin constituted unjust enrichment and sought a streamlined judicial process to recover the funds en masse. The court agreed in principle that users had no legal right to the erroneous deposits. But it rejected Bithumb's request for a consolidated recovery order, ruling instead that the exchange must pursue each user individually through civil claims. The burden of proof, the court held, lies with Bithumb: the exchange must demonstrate, case by case, that each user received funds in error, calculate the precise value at the time of receipt, and account for any price fluctuations in the interim. For Bithumb, this means years of piecemeal litigation and substantial legal costs. For users, it means potential lawsuits, asset freezes, and the specter of owing back cryptocurrency that may have appreciated--or depreciated--dramatically since they received it. "The court essentially told Bithumb: you made the mistake, you clean it up," said Park Jin-ho, a Seoul-based attorney specializing in fintech disputes. "But the practical effect is that many users will face legal action for something that wasn't their fault. It's a burden-shifting that feels deeply unfair." ## Crypto's Accountability Gap The Bithumb case highlights a tension that has simmered since the earliest days of cryptocurrency exchanges: these platforms occupy an uneasy middle ground between traditional financial institutions and the decentralized ethos of blockchain technology. Banks and brokerages operate under strict regulatory frameworks that define how errors must be handled, how customer funds are protected, and what recourse exists when things go wrong. Cryptocurrency exchanges, by contrast, often operate in regulatory gray zones. Terms of service--frequently dense, rarely read--typically grant exchanges broad discretion to reverse transactions, freeze accounts, or modify user balances. Yet when Bithumb sought to exercise that discretion, the court pushed back. The ruling emphasized that unilateral ledger reversals, absent user consent, could themselves constitute a form of property deprivation. The exchange's terms of service, the court found, did not clearly authorize clawbacks of this nature. "This is the accountability gap in action," said Kim Soo-yeon, a researcher at the [Korea Institute of Finance](https://www.kif.re.kr/). "Exchanges want the flexibility of operating outside traditional banking rules, but when mistakes happen, they also want the authority to fix them like a bank would. You can't have it both ways." ## Users Caught in the Middle For the users who received--and in some cases, spent--the erroneous Bitcoin, the court's ruling offers cold comfort. While they are not facing criminal charges, they may still be sued individually. And because Bitcoin's price has fluctuated wildly since February 2023, calculating what they "owe" is anything but straightforward. Consider a hypothetical user who received 0.5 BTC in error when Bitcoin traded at $23,000, then sold it at $45,000 months later. Does that user owe 0.5 BTC (currently worth approximately $97,000), the original $11,500 value, or the $22,500 they actually received? South Korean civil law provides some guidance--generally, unjust enrichment claims are calculated based on the benefit received--but the volatility of crypto assets introduces complications that traditional case law never anticipated. "I didn't ask for this money. I didn't steal anything. And now I might have to hire a lawyer because Bithumb's system broke," said one affected user, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the pending litigation. "How is that fair?" ## Industry Implications The Bithumb ruling is not legally binding outside South Korea, but its ripple effects may extend far beyond Seoul. Cryptocurrency exchanges worldwide are watching closely, aware that similar incidents--and similar legal battles--could unfold in their own jurisdictions. Some industry observers argue the decision will push exchanges toward more robust technical safeguards and clearer terms of service. Others worry it will have the opposite effect: if exchanges cannot easily recover mistaken transfers, they may become more aggressive in preemptively freezing accounts or more reluctant to take responsibility for errors at all. "The message to exchanges is: get your house in order, because courts won't bail you out," said Rachel Lin, co-founder of a Hong Kong-based crypto compliance consultancy. "But the message to users is equally stark: don't assume you're protected when things go wrong." For now, Bithumb has indicated it will pursue civil claims against users who withdrew the erroneous Bitcoin. The exchange declined to comment on the specifics of its legal strategy but issued a statement emphasizing its "commitment to fair and lawful resolution of the matter." The affected users, meanwhile, are left to wait--and to wonder whether the next glitch, on any exchange, might land them in a courtroom too. ## Related Reading - [South Korea's Virtual Asset User Protection Act](https://www.fsc.go.kr/eng/) - The regulatory framework governing crypto exchanges in Korea - [CoinDesk coverage of Korean crypto regulation](https://www.coindesk.com/tag/south-korea/) - [Previous Bithumb security incidents](https://www.reuters.com/technology/)