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Topic: Cryptocurrency exchange loses more than $500 million to hackers (Read 172 times)

legendary
Activity: 1442
Merit: 1016
Are cryptocurrencies safe ??

It depends and differs from coin to coin.
However I haven't ever heard of any Blockchain that got hacked successfully.
Mostly it had been wallets or exchanges that got hacked.
In terms of coincheck they announcend to pay their customers back the stolen funds. They will use their own money for that.
So you can imagine how much money these exchanges are making.
hero member
Activity: 1064
Merit: 500
The scariest thing is that it is almost impossible to catch these hackers and to prevent their future attacks. I have been always thinking about this danger, but it does not stop me from trading. Use paper wallets, use anti-virus programs. This stuff will protect you (but it does not give 100% protection).
Also good to use another laptop just for coins and tokens.
member
Activity: 266
Merit: 32
Are cryptocurrencies safe ??
member
Activity: 107
Merit: 10
these as some magazines , in the current value these is the biggest stealing in cryptocurrency history
full member
Activity: 406
Merit: 100
Market Integration Platform
I think it is hard for hackers to cash out those coins in a short time. But market is so strong, it seems it is only bad for those using this exchange.
member
Activity: 266
Merit: 32
it's like you are hiding "unpaid taxes money" under the carpet and thieves take it away. Now you cannot call the police.  Grin
member
Activity: 266
Merit: 32
Hackers stole several hundred million dollars' worth of a lesser-known cryptocurrency from a major Japanese exchange Friday.

Coincheck said that around 523 million of the exchange's NEM coins were sent to another account around 3 a.m. local time (1 p.m. ET Thursday), according to a Google translate of a Japanese transcript of the Friday press conference from Logmi. The exchange has about 6 percent of yen-bitcoin trading, ranking fourth by market share on CryptoCompare.

The stolen NEM coins were worth about 58 billion yen at the time of detection, or roughly $534.8 million, according to the exchange. Coincheck subsequently restricted withdrawals of all currencies, including yen, and trading of cryptocurrencies other than bitcoin.

Bloomberg first reported the hack. A CNBC email sent to Coincheck's listed address bounced back.

Cryptocurrency NEM, which intends to help businesses handle data digitally, briefly fell more than 20 percent Friday before recovering to trade about 10 percent lower near 85 cents, according to CoinMarketCap. Most other major digital currencies, including bitcoin, traded little changed on the day.

Coincheck management said in the press conference that it held the NEM coins in a "hot" wallet, referring to a method of storage that is linked to the internet. In contrast, leading U.S. exchange Coinbase says on its website that 98 percent of its digital currency holdings are offline, or in "cold" storage.

The Japanese exchange said it did not appear that hackers had stolen other digital currencies.

The Coincheck hack follows news in December that a South Korean cryptocurrency exchange called Youbit lost 17 percent of its digital assets. Its parent Yapian filed for bankruptcy.

In another high-profile case, Tokyo-based Mt. Gox filed for bankruptcy in 2014 and said it lost 750,000 of its users' bitcoins and 100,000 of the exchange's own. The company was the largest bitcoin exchange at the time.

Morgan Stanley analysts estimated in mid-December that more than $630 million in bitcoin has been lost to hackers.

Source: CNBC

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