Governments around the globe have also become more aware of the crypto market and the various ways in which it can be regulated.
Despite a growing adoption rate and involvement of mainstream financial giants, however, naysayers continue to portray crypto as a tool for miscreants and criminals.Several crypto platforms and decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols have been compromised over the years, owing to various code vulnerabilities or centralization problems. However, stealing of money is the easiest part, while moving that money and cashing it out is nearly impossible.
This is primarily because most crypto transactions are recorded on a public ledger which acts as a permanent trail, and even if the hacker uses various coin mixing services to hide its origins, powerful transaction monitoring tools can eventually identify such illicit trails.
Even coin mixing services themselves have started to block transactions associated or flagged as illicit.
Through rigorous study, crypto forensic firms such as Chainalysis and Elliptic have further debunked the notion that cryptocurrency provides an ideal tool for financial crimes and masking illicit activity.
A recent report by Chainalysis shows that the percentage of crypto transactions associated with illicit activities in 2021 was a mere 0.15%.
Cryptocurrencies have become more mainstream over the past couple of years, with the public prescription of the crypto market evolving from an internet bubble a couple of years ago to a reliable investment option today.
Dmytro Volkov, chief technology officer at crypto exchange CEX.IO, told Cointelegraph why the notion of crypto being primarily used by criminals is outdated:
“The misconception that crypto is predominantly used by criminals probably has roots in the days of the Silk Road. The truth is that the immutable aspect of the blockchain makes hiding transactions very difficult. In the case of Bitcoin, whose blockchain ledger is publicly available, a serious exchange with a competent analytics team can easily monitor and thwart hackers and launderers before the damage is done.”
He added that “as long as the security team stays proactive and ahead of the curve on blockchain technology, we can continue protecting our customers. As this industry continues to grow, I believe that this myth of crypto being used mainly by criminals will fade.”
Volkov noted that there is an “arms race going on between cybercriminals and the security teams of cryptocurrency ecosystems,” as ne’er-do-wells still try to find instruments to facilitate illicit activities. However, “this is not exclusive to the digital asset industry,” Volkov claimed.
A “paper” trail
There have been several instances in which criminals were found to be trying to launder stolen cryptocurrencies years after the fact, the most recent example being Bitfinex.
Law enforcement agents were able to follow the stolen Bitcoin (BTC) — estimated to be around $4 billion in today’s value — through the blockchain to eventually detain influencer Heather Morgan and her husband Ilya Lichtenstein, a cybersecurity specialist.
Related: Making sense of the Bitfinex Bitcoin billions
Derek Muhney, executive vice president at Coinsource — a Bitcoin ATM provider — told Cointelegraph:
“Look at the outcome of the 2016 Bitfinex hack. The individuals involved attempted to launder approximately $4.5 billion in cryptocurrency by employing several methodical laundering techniques. Still, law enforcement was able to follow the money through the blockchain, identify the perpetrators and recover a significant portion of the stolen money. Cases like this prove that criminals may try to take advantage of crypto but they won’t succeed. Crypto was created for the people and will continue to be for the good guys.”
From an outside perspective, using cryptocurrency for criminal activities might seem ideal. Online transactions can be done quickly and without having to physically move sums of…
Read More: cointelegraph.com