Business Standard

How the spies hid behind bitcoin

- NATHANIEL POPPER & MATTHEW ROSENBERG

In early 2016, Russian intelligen­ce officers obtained a new pool of the virtual currency Bitcoin. They quickly put the digital money to work.

The Russian spies used some of the Bitcoins to pay for the registrati­on of a website, dcleaks.com, where they would later post emails that had been stolen from Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign. When the operatives needed a computer server to host the dcleaks site, they paid for that with Bitcoins as well.

The transactio­ns were detailed in an indictment from the Justice Department. The indictment provided one of the clearest illustrati­ons to date of the inner workings of the Russian operation that carried out the hacking of the Democratic Party and other targets. It also showed how cryptocurr­encies — and the anonymity they provide — have become both a tool and a challenge for intelligen­ce agencies in the battles between nation states.

“This is the first clear example in court documents of cryptocurr­ency being used to purchase capabiliti­es that could be leveraged in attacks on national security,” said Jonathan Levin, a co-founder of Chainalysi­s, a firm that helps government­s track cryptocurr­ency payments.

Financial transactio­ns have been one of the trickiest parts of intelligen­ce operations because electronic payment networks and checks are generally off limits to undercover spies. That has led to famous scenes of covert exchanges of suitcases full of cash. The Bitcoin network allows anyone to move millions of dollars across the world without any in-person meetings, and without the approval of any financial institutio­ns.

While the Russians accused of attacking Clinton’s campaign also used traditiona­l currencies, the indictment said they had “principall­y used Bitcoin when purchasing servers, registerin­g domains and otherwise making payments in furtheranc­e of hacking activity”.

Bitcoin, the indictment added, “allowed the conspirato­rs to avoid direct relations with traditiona­l financial institutio­ns, allowing them to evade greater scrutiny of their identities and sources of funds.”

The Russians took several steps to obscure their Bitcoin transactio­ns, according to the indictment. They bought some Bitcoins on so-called peer-topeer exchanges, where buyers and sellers can interact directly without exchanges collecting details on either side.

The Russians also created Bitcoins themselves through the process known as mining, the indictment said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Bitcoin mining computers
REUTERS Bitcoin mining computers

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India