Waterloo Region Record

Ethereum owners bilked of $225M

- Lulu Yilun Chen and Yuji Nakamura

Here’s another reason to be leery of the initial coin offerings being done in the cryptocurr­ency world: there’s a onein-10 chance you’ll end up a victim of theft.

Phishing scams have helped push up criminal losses to about $225 million US this year, according to Chainalysi­s, a New York-based firm that analyzes transactio­ns and provides anti-money laundering software. In such scams, investors are tricked into sending money to internet addresses pretending to be funding sites for digital token offerings related to the ethereum blockchain technology.

More than 30,000 people have fallen prey to ethereumre­lated cyber crime, losing an average of $7,500 each, with initial coin offerings amassing about $1.6 billion in proceeds this year, Chainalysi­s estimates.

“It’s a huge amount of money to generate in such a short period of time,” said Jonathan Levin, co-founder of Chainalysi­s. “The cryptocurr­ency phishers are doing pretty good against all the other types of criminals that are out there.”

Indeed, the huge amount of wealth that has fallen prey to cyber criminals is approachin­g the losses incurred by robberies in the U.S. for 2015, which stood at $390 million US, according to statistics released by the FBI.

Initial coin offerings are digital token sales typically that raise ether, with users transferri­ng the funds to addresses provided by startups. Investors, sometimes eager to get early access to new token offerings have been tricked into providing their credential­s to fake websites through targeted email campaigns and Twitter posts, said Levin.

Most attacks involve creating websites or social media accounts that sound similar to the real initial coin offering project. Levin gave the fictional example of a project named “illuminate,” which an impostor might fake by spelling it as “iIIuminate.” Using the fake account, they would solicit potential investors to send money to the criminal’s address.

His firm compiled the data by identifyin­g so-called digital wallets used by scam artists. That informatio­n is usually public because criminals widely circulate it, hoping to fool investors into sending them money.

Other common forms of crime involve tapping into project loopholes. The DAO, or decentrali­zed autonomous organizati­on, is a smart contract project built on top of ethereum that was intended to democratiz­e how ethereum projects are funded. A bug in the system was exploited and that led to the theft of $55 million worth of ether at the time.

Levin didn’t provide data for bitcoin-related cybercrime, and not because it is any safer. He said such data is harder to track as scams are usually specific attacks on individual holders, rather than initial coin offering-related campaigns which try to dupe many people at once.

“The overall figures mean there is infrastruc­ture that we need to build to help prevent people from getting abused,” said Levin.

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