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Bitcoin United States

US Presses Crypto Exchanges To Block Ransomware Profits (bloomberg.com) 28

The Justice Department is creating a new team to investigate and prevent hackers from using cryptocurrency exchanges to remain anonymous while extorting money from victims of their attacks, Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said Wednesday. From a report: The main goal of the new enforcement team is to take down the infrastructure and "criminal supply chain" that allows hackers to carry out ransomware attacks in which victims' data is frozen until they pay a ransom, Monaco said. "Cryptocurrency exchanges want to be the banks of the future," Monaco told the Aspen Cyber Summit. "We need to make sure that folks can have confidence when they use these systems."
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US Presses Crypto Exchanges To Block Ransomware Profits

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  • by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <gameboyrmh&gmail,com> on Wednesday October 06, 2021 @03:38PM (#61867175) Journal

    Where are the tags when you need them?

    Cryptocurrency exchanges should've never been allowed to exist for this long. It's a ridiculous farce to have a huge international anti-money-laundering and sanctions system while people can casually saunter around them with cryptocurrencies, and this is why ransomware went from a rare oddity to a 9-digit industry crippling critical infrastructure. Outlawing the exchange of cryptocurrencies will set things back to how they were, with the pleasant side-effects of dismantling all sorts of criminal finance.

    • by timholman ( 71886 ) on Wednesday October 06, 2021 @03:54PM (#61867225)

      Cryptocurrency exchanges should've never been allowed to exist for this long. It's a ridiculous farce to have a huge international anti-money-laundering and sanctions system while people can casually saunter around them with cryptocurrencies, and this is why ransomware went from a rare oddity to a 9-digit industry crippling critical infrastructure.

      The insanity is about to level up. You know all those Bitcoin ATMs that are being installed all over the U.S.? The phone scammers have begun to direct their victims to them.

      I just saw a post on Nextdoor where some scammers tried the "you missed jury duty and the police are going to arrest you" scam, except that instead of telling their would-be victim to buy gift cards to pay the "fine", they directed her to what they called a "federal kiosk", i.e. a Bitcoin ATM.

      She didn't fall for it, but other victims have been duped. It's only going to get worse.

      • Ah but on the bright side when we go, "I bet you will not do this", the losers can now easily pay it off.

      • How is that any different than asking for prepaid Visa card numbers? You want to ban those too?

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Still waiting for that crash that the financial wizards of slashdot have been predicting for a decade now...

          Still waiting for bitcoin to hit $100K like the bitcoin bros [urbandictionary.com] have been promising everyone for years now...

        • How is that any different than asking for prepaid Visa card numbers? You want to ban those too?

          Because those can be cancelled easily and instantly; and are still much more traceable than Cryptocurrency.

          • Bitcoin is traceable. That is the entire point.

            • by torkus ( 1133985 )

              Bitcoin is completely traceable*

              *you can see where the coins go, split, twice, and do the hula-hula but private wallets remain private and are relatively trivial to protect the anonymity of. Your main risk is using it to purchase something identifiable or in an identifiable way before the money is hopelessly mixed and effectively washed.

              Scammers might be stupid enough, but each transaction is generally small and not worth the resources to chase. Large scale ransomware is unlikely to be that naïve abo

            • Bitcoin is traceable. That is the entire point.

              Sure it is (rollseyes)

              Tell me another bedtime story, daddy!

          • by mysidia ( 191772 )

            Because those can be cancelled easily and instantly

            That does not make them any more resistant to being used by scammers than Bitcoins. By the time the number gets "instantly cancelled" - the scammer's already withdrawn the funds.

            If anything, the Prepaid / Gift card industry could learn something from the Bitcoin exchange industry --- Introduce a waiting period before funds from a newly activated gift card could be spent, similar to the Bitcoin wait for "3 Transaction confirmations" - I.E. Require

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      How are they different than futures trading?

      It's also hilarious to see this place advocating to make software illegal. I'm sure banning crypto will work about as well as stopping software and media piracy.

      • How are they different than futures trading?

        Futures can't be traded internationally in untraceable ways for one thing.

        It's also hilarious to see this place advocating to make software illegal.

        I'm not advocating for making software illegal, I'm advocating for making the exchange of untraceable computer data for money, goods or services illegal. The art world was bad enough for creating arguably valueless money laundering tokens already, cryptocurrencies cranking them out by the zillions has just made the problem vastly worse.

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Pretty good FP, though I doubt anything can be done to encourage "constructive" discussion on any topic related to cryptocurrencies. It's a "no common sense" zone where reasoned discussion is not allowed. Or you could word it as incommensurable premises?

      The cryptocurrency speculators are hardcore gamblers insisting they can beat the house. At least that seems to be true for all of the ones with track records (and most of the track records were proven bad, too). Most of them seem to have gold rush mentality,

  • So they're going to try to kill decentralized exchanges? There's really no way for those systems to implement KYC unless the fed comes up with a system for tying a wallet to a person.
  • Laundering the money should provide no surprise.

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