Business Day

Cryptocurr­ency theft up 250% from 2017

- Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss Reuters

Theft of cryptocurr­encies via hacking of exchanges and trading platforms soared to $927m in the first nine months of the year, up nearly 250% from 2017, according to a report from US-based cyber security firm CipherTrac­e released in New York on Wednesday.

The report reflecting criminal activity and money laundering in the digital currency market also showed a steady rise in smaller thefts in the $20m-$60m range, totalling $173m in the third quarter.

Digital currencies stolen from exchanges in 2017 came to a total of $266m, according to a previous report from Cipher-Trace. Bitcoin’s popularity and the emergence of more than 1,600 other digital coins or tokens has drawn more hackers into the cryptocurr­ency space, expanding opportunit­ies for crime and fraud.

“The regulators are still a couple of years behind because there are only a few countries that have really applied strong anti-money-laundering laws,” Dave Jevans, CEO of CipherTrac­e, said in an interview.

Jevans is also the chair of the Anti-Phishing Working Group, a global organisati­on that aims to help solve cyber crime.

There were probably 50% more criminal transactio­ns than those traced for this report, Jevans said. For instance, CipherTrac­e knew of more than $60m in cryptocurr­ency stolen but not reported. The figures also showed that the top cryptocurr­ency exchanges in countries with weak anti-moneylaund­ering regulation­s were used to launder $2.5bn in bitcoins since 2009.

The top 20 virtual currency exchanges in terms of volume were analysed for the report. CipherTrac­e declined to name those exchanges. These money-laundered funds represente­d transactio­ns that CipherTrac­e could monitor directly and designate as criminal or highly suspect. In estimating the $2.5bn figure, CipherTrac­e looked at about 350-million transactio­ns on the 20 exchanges and found 100-million of those with counterpar­ties. From there, the firm was able to cross-check the 100-million transactio­ns with its own data on criminal activity.

At the same time, these exchanges were also used to buy 236,979 bitcoins worth of criminal services, equivalent to about $1.5bn at current prices, the report showed.

“All exchanges get these money-laundered funds. You really can’t stop them,” said Jevans. “And here’s the reason why. We learn about the criminal stuff oftentimes after it actually happened. So there’s no way to know in real time.

“You can know 80%-90% of the time, but it’s impossible to know 100%,” he said. /

 ?? /Reuters ?? Hack jobs: The rise in popularity of cryptocurr­encies has resulted in more criminals entering the space to break into platforms and exchanges.
/Reuters Hack jobs: The rise in popularity of cryptocurr­encies has resulted in more criminals entering the space to break into platforms and exchanges.

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