Cryptocurrency crime has slowed this year, but ‘DeFi’ hacks on the rise: report – The Globe and Mail

Losses from cryptocurrency thefts, hacks, and fraud declined to $1.8 billion for the first 10 months of the year compared with last year, but crime in the hot decentralized finance sector rose, according to a report from crypto intelligence company CipherTrace.

Crypto crime hit $4.5 billion globally in 2019.

What we have seen is that exchanges and other cryptocurrency players have implemented more security procedures, Dave Jevans, CipherTraces chief executive officer, told Reuters.

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They have taken the guidance and implemented the procedures to secure their funds better. So youre going to see less mass-scale hacks.

So far this year, losses from thefts and hacks, excluding misappropriation and fraud, grew to $468 million as of end-October, up 30 per cent from $361 million for the whole of last year, the CipherTrace report said. About 20 per cent of those hacks, or roughly $98 million, came from decentralized finance or DeFi, which are transactions on platforms that facilitate lending outside of banks.

The total number of loans on DeFi platforms was $12.6 billion as of late Monday, industry site DeFi Pulse data showed, up more than 200 per cent from roughly $4 billion in August. DeFi sites run on open infrastructure, with algorithms that set rates in real time based on supply and demand.

The surge in DeFi was what ultimately attracted criminal hackers, resulting in the most hacks for the sector this year.

In 2019, DeFi hacks were virtually negligible, CipherTrace said.

Companies and individuals have rushed DeFi products to market that have not gone through security verification and validation, said Jevans. So people are figuring out that theres a weakness here.

With DeFi networks permissionless by design, which means they often lack clear regulatory compliance, anyone in any country is able to access them with little to no customer-verification hurdles involved.

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As a result, Jevans said DeFican easily become a haven for money launderers.

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Originally posted here:
Cryptocurrency crime has slowed this year, but 'DeFi' hacks on the rise: report - The Globe and Mail

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