Pages:
Author

Topic: Chainalysis research reveals: only a small percentage of mixed coins are illegal (Read 343 times)

full member
Activity: 546
Merit: 100
I honestly don't believe this research. With so many scams and hacks going around crypto and add those illegal trades of drug and other stuff, mixers is always their way to go. It should not even be below 20% but should 35%-40% because just like in recent studies, there were billions of money that were stolen in cryptocurrency and they have used mixers to protect themselves.
member
Activity: 281
Merit: 77
You got questions? We got answers. coinclarity.com
That's my take, and it's the correct one. Wink

The size of ego of some of the people on this site is utterly breathtaking.

The important thing is what the data says. You're just hand-waving and trying to convince everyone to ignore the data Chainalysis published. I wonder why that could be?



This is a pretty stupid thing to say. I could say the _exact_ same thing about you. You are drawing your own conclusions that favor your own economic interest. The data says exactly what it says. It does not say anything about the % of "illegal" bitcoin. You are assuming that none of the funds coming from

exchanges
other mixers
unnamed services

have illicit origins, which is a giant, careless leap in logic that happens to be extremely convenient for your signature campaign income.

I wonder why that could be?

In your instance its extremely clear what motivates you to draw your conclusions. In mine, not so much. Care to explain how I stand to benefit here?
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1196
STOP SNITCHIN'
I'm not sure why you're obsessing about Chainalysis' wording. It's very easy to deduce that "only a small percentage of mixed coins" have illicit origins based on the published data:

Quote
8.1% stolen
2.7% darknet markets

That's your take on their findings, not theirs. Their take would infer the exact opposite if you go by the wording they used on their slides.

That's my take, and it's the correct one. Wink

The important thing is what the data says. You're just hand-waving and trying to convince everyone to ignore the data Chainalysis published. I wonder why that could be?

legendary
Activity: 1652
Merit: 1483
Do you really have a problem with people freely buying and selling drugs? Who are they hurting?

Ah nobody, they are nice guys. I got this image from Google search "traficantes rio" (drug dealers Rio de janeiro)

those look like street dealers/gangsters. i'm pretty sure they aren't representative of darknet market vendors. one of the primary features of darknet markets is they remove the need to deal with street-level criminals!

for example, this guy was arrested on his way to an international beard competition for selling drugs on dream market. he seems a lot more representative of the DNM scene to me:

member
Activity: 281
Merit: 77
You got questions? We got answers. coinclarity.com
Chainalysis has done some research about the origin of mixed coins:

The problem is, they didn't say "only a small percentage of mixed coins are illegal." They just said 8.1% are stolen coins.

I'm not sure why you're obsessing about Chainalysis' wording. It's very easy to deduce that "only a small percentage of mixed coins" have illicit origins based on the published data:

Quote
8.1% stolen
2.7% darknet markets

That's your take on their findings, not theirs. Their take would infer the exact opposite if you go by the wording they used on their slides.
legendary
Activity: 2212
Merit: 5622
Non-custodial BTC Wallet
Do you really have a problem with people freely buying and selling drugs? Who are they hurting?

Ah nobody, they are nice guys. I got this image from Google search "traficantes rio" (drug dealers Rio de janeiro)



You guys are all distorting what I said, saying that if I think mixing services helping criminals is not something nice, so I am in favor to reversible transactions , censorship, I am also against mixers , and many others absurds I read here like "what's wrong with drug dealers?"

But that's ok, I am done here, just couldn't let this about drug dealers with no answer.

I am a drug user, but I am against those criminals and I will not defend them.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1196
STOP SNITCHIN'
Chainalysis has done some research about the origin of mixed coins:

The problem is, they didn't say "only a small percentage of mixed coins are illegal." They just said 8.1% are stolen coins.

I'm not sure why you're obsessing about Chainalysis' wording. It's very easy to deduce that "only a small percentage of mixed coins" have illicit origins based on the published data:

Quote
8.1% stolen
2.7% darknet markets

The other categories being exchanges, other mixers, mining pools, gambling services, coin generation, and unnamed services.

Are you saying that 10.8% is a large percentage? What would you call the other 89.2%? I guess we can let people decide for themselves. Either way, the myth that mixers are only used by criminals has been debunked.
member
Activity: 281
Merit: 77
You got questions? We got answers. coinclarity.com
Chainalysis has done some research about the origin of mixed coins:

The problem is, they didn't say "only a small percentage of mixed coins are illegal." They just said 8.1% are stolen coins.

I'm cross posting this from another thread on the subject:


I listened to the entire Chainalysis webinar and nowhere did they say "most mixed bitcoin is not used for illicit purposes."

https://register.gotowebinar.com/recording/8980410054773689612

What they did say was this:

Quote
While stolen funds only represent about 8% of the funds received by mixers, mixers are by far the biggest destination of funds after they've been stolen.

They also had these slides in their presentation:





So, however you want to interpret their findings is up to you; my conclusion is they don't have a very high regard for bitcoin mixers.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1196
STOP SNITCHIN'
I think that if mixers just go on mixing stolen coins, they will soon be all shut down by authorities. And for good reason. Do you support drug dealers? International weapon traffic? This has nothing to do with Bitcoin. This is a centralized service built on the top of it.

The issue is more complex and nuanced than that.

Do you really have a problem with people freely buying and selling drugs? Who are they hurting? The principles that early adopters like Ross Ulbricht stood for -- are they lost on you? Did you ever consider how important the Silk Road was in proving Bitcoin's utility?

Whatever Bitcoin was made for, it wasn't for bowing down to the authorities. On the contrary, it was made precisely so we could avoid them. Sadly, later adopters often take this for granted.

Edit: people some times get a little delusional about this. Imagine a physical store with a sign "money laundry for criminals, come and make your money clean! Fighting censorship!"
This is just ridiculous. Criminals are specially the ones who censor us the most. Criminals make us afraid to walk at night, they force us to put bars on windows, alarm in our houses, lock our doors.... criminal activities should never be encouraged.

Criminals are going to exist no matter what.

The only thing you'll accomplish by arguing against mixers -- and in favor of blockchain analysis and law enforcement -- is attacking Bitcoin's fungibility. That only hurts you and everyone around you.
legendary
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1427

Mixers are centralized services built on top of blockchain technology. They have absolutely nothing to do with Bitcoin's resistance to censorship, regulations, irreversible transactions, etc.

If mixers refuse to mix stolen coin, this has absolutely nothing to do with reversible transactions or censorship on Bitcoin network

Bitcoin will continue existing without any modifications if mixers disappear.

I think that if mixers just go on mixing stolen coins, they will soon be all shut down by authorities. And for good reason. Do you support drug dealers? International weapon traffic? This has nothing to do with Bitcoin. This is  a centralized service built on the top of it.


Edit: people some times get a little delusional about this. Imagine a physical store with a sign "money laundry for criminals, come and make your money clean! Fighting censorship!"
This is just ridiculous. Criminals are specially the ones who censor us the most. Criminals make us afraid to walk at night, they force us to put bars on windows, alarm in our houses, lock our doors.... criminal activities should never be encouraged.

Maybe you live in a country where criminal activity is near zero and you have some crazy ideology about criminals,but they are not nice.
Yeah i think you're the one who might be a bit delusional about this concept. Or perhaps i am.

The idea that there's some sort of morality you need to support about stolen or laundered coins in the first place is just crazy in my opinion. Do you have any idea how much drug dollars each year is laundered through central banks (Deutsche is a prime example, but almost every bank does it.) They get some minor fines compared to the amounts that they actually laundered and go on about their day.

Most of these (partly state-owned) banks thrive on such business, and yet they want to burn down every mixer because ~11% may contain funds from illegal sources?

the government puts on a facade but in the end they're the one who perpetrated certain crises such as the opioid one to get black budgets, (not to mention the money they make from these fines, and stimulations of the economy due to the laundering money. etc.). (CIA)

I'm a bit of a lolbertarian so perhaps that's why i think this way. Anyhow...



A mixer is simply a tool to get absolute privacy and freedom of transacting money without worrying about someone investigating certain things about these transactions. An absolute "Right To Financial Privacy Act"- Something i would perhaps deem a human right. That such a tool is misused by criminals is an unfortunate side effect, but doesn't mean that we all of a sudden should give up our right to privacy.

Comparably is the spying on law-abiding citizens by looking at their ISP data etc. Just because there might be some terrorists out there we shouldn't just give up all of our personal privacy, and rights to private communications.


Quote
I think that if mixers just go on mixing stolen coins, they will soon be all shut down by authorities. And for good reason. Do you support drug dealers? International weapon traffic? This has nothing to do with Bitcoin. This is  a centralized service built on the top of it.
Why isn't every major bank shut down by now... because they have "regulations in place" which gives them a carte blanche when caught?

Anyway, note that i absolutely do not support any of the above mentioned, hackers, laundering etc, and that i am also not aware chipmixer is used as a vehicle on a grand-scale for these types of people.
legendary
Activity: 2212
Merit: 5622
Non-custodial BTC Wallet
But blockchain technology can stop criminal activity, because blockchain is open and public. Blockchain tech was never made for criminals, as far as I understand this tech.

It's fully possible, but it'd be public permissioned blockchain and censorship (as i mentioned earlier) will be possible.

Bitcoin won't be fungible at all since an UTXO can't be spent and Bitcoin transaction is reversible, that would be a nightmare.


Mixers are centralized services built on top of blockchain technology. They have absolutely nothing to do with Bitcoin's resistance to censorship, regulations, irreversible transactions, etc.

If mixers refuse to mix stolen coin, this has absolutely nothing to do with reversible transactions or censorship on Bitcoin network

Bitcoin will continue existing without any modifications if mixers disappear.

I think that if mixers just go on mixing stolen coins, they will soon be all shut down by authorities. And for good reason. Do you support drug dealers? International weapon traffic? This has nothing to do with Bitcoin. This is  a centralized service built on the top of it.

Edit: people some times get a little delusional about this. Imagine a physical store with a sign "money laundry for criminals, come and make your money clean! Fighting censorship!"
This is just ridiculous. Criminals are specially the ones who censor us the most. Criminals make us afraid to walk at night, they force us to put bars on windows, alarm in our houses, lock our doors.... criminal activities should never be encouraged.

Maybe you live in a country where criminal activity is near zero and you have some crazy ideology about criminals,but they are not nice.
legendary
Activity: 1652
Merit: 1483
But blockchain technology can stop criminal activity, because blockchain is open and public. Blockchain tech was never made for criminals, as far as I understand this tech.

bitcoin was designed to be permissionless---to eliminate the need for any authority or middleman in financial transactions. as such, i think it's rather philosophically indifferent about the notion of crime, money laundering, and so on. each transaction is only the business of sender and recipient.

bitcoin's blockchain was made transparent to verify the integrity of the supply (no double spending, additional inflation etc), not as a crime fighting mechanism.
legendary
Activity: 2212
Merit: 5622
Non-custodial BTC Wallet
I believe that if the mixer is able to track down stolen funds, it should refuse to mix. Criminal activities should not be encouraged by the blockchain technology, which were not made for criminals, but for regular people.

And no one would use such mixers, imagine what would happen if their system made a mistake or they use such excuse to selectively scamming their users.

And if blockchain technology could stop criminal activity, that means it could be used for censorship tools which defeat the purpose of using blockchain technology (at least on cryptocurrency usage).

There is some truth in this. Probably nobody would use it... Because they could make a mistake.

But blockchain technology can stop criminal activity, because blockchain is open and public. Blockchain tech was never made for criminals, as far as I understand this tech.
legendary
Activity: 2870
Merit: 7490
Crypto Swap Exchange
I believe that if the mixer is able to track down stolen funds, it should refuse to mix. Criminal activities should not be encouraged by the blockchain technology, which were not made for criminals, but for regular people.

And no one would use such mixers, imagine what would happen if their system made a mistake or they use such excuse to selectively scamming their users.

And if blockchain technology could stop criminal activity, that means it could be used for censorship tools which defeat the purpose of using blockchain technology (at least on cryptocurrency usage).
legendary
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1427
About the likes of Coinbase not accepting coins from gambling sites, What could be the reason for this kind of restriction?
I have always sent crypto from gambling websites to the likes of Binance, Kucoin etc but I haven't met any challenges so far, so i guess most gambling chaps do the same too.
I'v read that it was because the gambling sites were actually illegal in most jurisdictions (the US etcetera), due to them not having any licenses whatsoever.

This was some time ago though, so i'm not sure this is actually still the case for most sites. (I imagine Nitrogensports and those kinds of sites have a license by now.)

It was also in their prohibited business list? https://bitedge.com/blog/coinbase-restricts-users-for-gambling-transactions/ (Doesn't look like that's the case anymore though)
copper member
Activity: 1624
Merit: 1899
Amazon Prime Member #7

I would be curious to know where the mixed coins end up, specifically the percentage of mixed coins that end up at DNMs. The article briefly touched on this, but it doesn't appear to be addressed in the chart; I would also like to know the percentage of mixed coin that is proceeds from ransomware. 
I know there was a website which displayed all of Chipmixer's outputs. Combine that with some wallet identifiers (Walletexplorer etc) and i'm pretty sure someone could make a nice statistic. I'm quite curious too, but i don't think it'll be much different from the graph linked in the OP (minus the illicit and illegal markets) => mainly exchanges probably.
I believe the website you are referring to was run by the now defunct Bestmixer that was seized by EU government authorities a few months ago. Hosting may have been prepaid for a few months, but probably will not last much longer if it is still online. Based on how slow walletexplorer is, I don't think the operator wants people scraping his site, and the creator of the website actually works for chainanalysis.

I would hypothesize that some people, being afraid of exchanges like coinbase closing their accounts, use mixers to hide the fact they are using purchased coins for gambling and purchases on DNMs. Some users of mixers may also use intermediary addresses after receiving coin from a mixer and before depositing the coin they receive to wherever they will spend their coin.
legendary
Activity: 1652
Merit: 1483
The problem is that darknet + stolen funds are 11%, which is still very high. Stolen funds being mixed is terrible...

I believe that if the mixer is able to track down stolen funds, it should refuse to mix. Criminal activities should not be encouraged by the blockchain technology, which were not made for criminals, but for regular people.

i don't think mixers are in a position to be judge, jury, and executioner. they aren't multi-million dollar VC-backed companies with the mission of blockchain analysis like chainalysis and ciphertrace. they shouldn't be held to the same standards IMO. they have one job---to exchange your taint with other peoples taint.

at least with a significant super majority using mixers for legit purposes, we can put the "only criminals use mixers" mantra to rest.
legendary
Activity: 2212
Merit: 5622
Non-custodial BTC Wallet
Finally, it's a good sign to have an official confirmation that mixers are indeed widely used for privacy reasons to anonymize Bitcoins and only a small fraction is used for illegal purposes. So, the arguments against Bitcoin mixing seem not as valid as often claimed that mixing is mainly used for criminal activities...

The problem is that darknet + stolen funds are 11%, which is still very high. Stolen funds being mixed is terrible...

I believe that if the mixer is able to track down stolen funds, it should refuse to mix. Criminal activities should not be encouraged by the blockchain technology, which were not made for criminals, but for regular people.
legendary
Activity: 1624
Merit: 1129
Bitcoin FTW!
Yeah, i for sure thought that would be higher considering Coinbase et al don't seem to accept coins from certain gambling sites, or so have i read, while they don't have a problem with mixers.
Maybe it's hard for them to detect that the coins are coming from a mixing service.

About the likes of Coinbase not accepting coins from gambling sites, What could be the reason for this kind of restriction?
I have always sent crypto from gambling websites to the likes of Binance, Kucoin etc but I haven't met any challenges so far, so i guess most gambling chaps do the same too.
I've never really seen a good explanation as to why Coinbase doesn't allow you to use your coins on gambling sites, but I assume it's just something to do with all the regulations that they have to deal with. It's been like this for quite some time as I've seen these sorts of posts up to three or four years ago as well.
legendary
Activity: 2100
Merit: 1208
Heisenberg
Yeah, i for sure thought that would be higher considering Coinbase et al don't seem to accept coins from certain gambling sites, or so have i read, while they don't have a problem with mixers.
Maybe it's hard for them to detect that the coins are coming from a mixing service.

About the likes of Coinbase not accepting coins from gambling sites, What could be the reason for this kind of restriction?
I have always sent crypto from gambling websites to the likes of Binance, Kucoin etc but I haven't met any challenges so far, so i guess most gambling chaps do the same too.
Pages:
Jump to: