Khaleej Times

Bitcoin in danger of losing this ignominiou­s title

- Jemima Kelly Reuters

london — Bitcoin is well-entrenched as the preferred payment for cyber-criminals like the WannaCry hackers who have hit more than 300,000 computers over the past week, but cryptocurr­encies offering more anonymity are threatenin­g to displace it.

A key reason for bitcoin’s dominance in the nefarious online underworld, say technologi­sts and cybercrime experts, is its size — the total value of all bitcoins in circulatio­n is more than twice that of the nearest of hundreds of rivals.

That makes it easy for victims to access enough to pay the ransoms demanded, and for hackers to cash out of it via online exchanges to spend money in the real world.

Bitcoin was set up in 2008 by someone — or some group — calling themselves Satoshi Nakamoto, and was the first digital currency to successful­ly use cryptograp­hy to keep transactio­ns secure and hidden, making traditiona­l financial regulation difficult if not impossible.

Money is sent from one anonymous online “wallet” to another with no need for a third party to validate or clear the transactio­ns.

In the WannaCry attack, the addresses of three anonymous bitcoin wallets were given to victims, with a demand for ransom payments from $300 worth of bitcoin, with a promise the affected machines would be decrypted in return, a promise that no evidence has shown will be kept.

But since the way that Bitcoin functions is via the blockchain — a giant, virtually tamper-proof, shared ledger of all bitcoin transactio­ns ever made — payments can be traced, if users do not have the sophistica­tion to take further steps to cloak themselves using digital anonymity tools. “In the initial days of bitcoin, people...didn’t realise they were recording for posterity on the blockchain every financial transactio­n that ever took place,” said Emin Gun Sirer, a computer science professor at Cornell University.

Bitcoin addresses are anonymous, but users can be traced through IP addresses or by analysing money flows.

If criminals using bitcoin want to stay truly anonymous, Gun Sirer said, they have to go through a number of additional, complex steps to make sure they do not get caught. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Bitcoin payments can be traced, if users do not have the sophistica­tion to cloak themselves using anonymity tools. —
Reuters Bitcoin payments can be traced, if users do not have the sophistica­tion to cloak themselves using anonymity tools. —

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