The Borneo Post

Bitcoin speculator­s, not drug dealers, dominate crypto use now

- By Camila Russo

THE RATIO of legal to illegal activity in bitcoin has flipped, according to Lilita Infante at the US Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

When Infante started seeing the bitcoin pop up in her cases at the DEA five years ago, her analysis of blockchain data showed criminal activity was behind about 90 per cent of transactio­ns in the cryptocurr­ency. Now, illegal activity has shrunk to about 10 per cent and speculatio­n has become the dominant driver, she said.

That doesn’t mean criminals stopped using bitcoin. Total transactio­n volume associated with illegal uses has surged since 2013, said Infante, who is a DEA special agent and part of the 10person Cyber Investigat­ive Task Force. The team focuses on dark web and virtual- currency related investigat­ions and collaborat­es with other Department of Justice units including the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

“The volume has grown tremendous­ly, the amount of transactio­ns and the dollar value has grown tremendous­ly over the years in criminal activity, but the ratio has decreased,’’ she said in an interview at her office in Weston, Florida. “The majority of transactio­ns are used for price speculatio­n.’’

Infante’s findings contradict the popular perception that bitcoin is mostly being used by criminals such as the notorious Dread Pirate Roberts, but also show that the undergroun­d market is one of the biggest groups of people using bitcoin for its actual features rather than its price gyrations.

Transactio­ns are pseudonymo­us, so not easily traceable, while a decentrali­zed ledger eliminates the need for banks and government­s, and also means there’s no company that can be subpoenaed in an investigat­ion.

The dark web, where illegal goods are sold, functions exclusivel­y in cryptocurr­ency, as has been the case for years, she said.

What’s become a growing trend in the past year is that criminal organisati­ons, like drug cartels, are increasing­ly using digital currencies across their operations, from money laundering to cross-border transfers, as it’s cheaper, faster and perceived to be more secure than going through the banking system, Infante said.

It’s a double- edged sword for criminals though, as law enforcemen­t is using blockchain technology to its advantage. bitcoin and other blockchain­s are public and immutable, providing a valuable resource for agents to track transactio­ns and patterns, and while wallet addresses once obscured users’ identities, Infante said, “not anymore.’’

Though users sometimes will exchange bitcoin for other coins with lower fees and faster transactio­n times to transfer funds, the overwhelmi­ng majority of dealings are still in bitcoin. Privacy-focused cryptocurr­encies like Monero and Zcash aren’t liquid enough and while they’re more anonymous than bitcoin, “we still have ways of tracking them,’’ Infante said.

Trafficker­s and money launderers exchange bitcoin for fiat currencies in overthecou­nter and peer-to-peer exchanges, though they also go through major US-based exchanges, Infante said.

Infante said criminals will likely continue using cryptocurr­encies, but that’s fine with her.

“The blockchain actually gives us a lot of tools to be able to identify people,’’ she said. “I actually want them to keep using them.’’ — Bloomberg

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