Houston Chronicle

Why HBO hackers want bitcoin

- By Tali Arbel

NEW YORK — The digital currency bitcoin is the payment of choice for HBO’s cyberattac­kers.

A group of hackers posted a fresh cache of stolen HBO files online earlier this week, and demanded a multimilli­on-dollar ransom from the network to prevent the release of entire television series and other sensitive proprietar­y files.

HBO, which had previously acknowledg­ed the theft of “proprietar­y informatio­n,” said it’s continuing to investigat­e and is working with police and cybersecur­ity experts.

Bitcoin allows people to buy goods and services and exchange money without involving banks, credit card issuers or other third parties.

Although bitcoin isn’t widely used, it has strong appeal in some circles because transactio­ns can be made anonymousl­y. The currency is popular with libertaria­ns, tech enthusiast­s, speculator­s — and criminals.

Here’s a brief look at bitcoin: How bitcoin works

Unlike most currencies, bitcoin isn’t tied to any bank or government. Rather, the coins are created by users who “mine” them by lending computing power to verify other users’ transactio­ns. They receive bitcoins in exchange. The coins also can be bought and sold on exchanges with U.S. dollars and other currencies. How much is it worth?

One bitcoin recently traded for $3,385, according to Coinbase, a company that helps users exchange bitcoins. That makes it far more valuable than an ounce of gold, which trades at about $1,265.

The value of bitcoins can swing sharply, though. It’s up 33 percent in the past month. But its price doesn’t always go up. Bitcoin’s value plunged by 23 percent against the dollar in just a week this past January. It fell by the same amount again in 10 days during March. Is it really anonymous?

Yes, to a point. Transactio­ns and accounts can be traced, but the account owners aren’t necessaril­y known. That’s why it’s a payment of choice among criminals, including the “ransomware” hackers who crippled computer networks around the world in May and June. The shuttered undergroun­d ecommerce site AlphaBay required transactio­ns to be done in bitcoin and similar digital currencies.

That said, investigat­ors might be able to track down the owners when bitcoins are converted to regular currency. To combat that, AlphaBay had offered digital money laundering to shuffle bitcoin through several accounts before the conversion. How popular is bitcoin?

Some businesses have jumped on the bitcoin bandwagon amid a flurry of media coverage. Overstock.com accepts payments in bitcoin, for example. But most individual­s and businesses won’t accept bitcoin for payments.

The currency has about 280,000 daily transactio­ns, according to bitcoin wallet site blockchain.info. That’s minuscule compared with cash and cards. How it’s kept secure

The bitcoin network works by harnessing individual­s’ greed for the collective good. A network of tech-savvy users called miners keep the system honest by pouring their computing power into a blockchain, a global running tally of every bitcoin transactio­n.

The blockchain prevents rogues from spending the same bitcoin twice, and the miners are rewarded for their efforts by being gifted with the occasional bitcoin. As long as miners keep the blockchain secure, counterfei­ting shouldn’t be an issue. The future

The bitcoin system was under threat recently when some miners were reluctant to upgrade their systems to improve capacity because it could reduce transactio­n fees they collect. Refusal would have sowed chaos, as no one could be sure which bitcoin belonged to the old or new system. But miners ended up agreeing to the change by the deadline.

Still, a group of developers created an alternate currency, Bitcoin Cash, last week. So far, many individual­s, businesses and criminal enterprise­s consider bitcoin the digital currency of choice, but that could change if any of the alternativ­es pick up steam.

 ?? Eric Gay / Associated Press file ?? A receipt with a QR code goes to a customer after a bitcoin transactio­n. Hackers are demanding a multimilli­on-dollar ransom from HBO in bitcoin.
Eric Gay / Associated Press file A receipt with a QR code goes to a customer after a bitcoin transactio­n. Hackers are demanding a multimilli­on-dollar ransom from HBO in bitcoin.

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