January 26, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Coincheck Hackers May Have Successfully Laundered all their Stolen NEM Coins

Coincheck Hackers May Have Successfully Laundered all their Stolen NEM Coins
Coincheck Hackers May Have Successfully Laundered all their Stolen NEM Coins

According to recent reports, the hackers responsible for the January 2018 NEM heist from the Coincheck cryptocurrency exchange platform may have successfully laundered all their stolen NEM coins (XEM).

Laundering the Loot

In March 2018, BTCManager reported that the Coincheck hackers were laundering their loot on dark web cryptocurrency exchange platforms.

At the time of the report, it was believed that the hackers had been able to convert half of the stolen XEM successfully. The Coincheck heist, which resulted in the theft of over $500 million worth of NEM coins, is considered to be the worst cryptocurrency hack in the history of the market.

The hackers allegedly set up an anonymous cryptocurrency exchange platform on the dark web in the aftermath of the heist. They used this platform to exchange their stolen NEM coins for other cryptocurrencies. The system only accepted payments in bitcoin and litecoin, with the coins being sold at a 15 percent discount to interested buyers.

The system was also designed to be automated, and it attracted many buyers looking to cash in on the premium.

The dark web exchange platform is reported to have appeared about a fortnight after the hack. The platform seemed to have been designed to provide adequate customer service features to buyers. There were even features that allowed support tickets to be raised if a buyer was experiencing any technical difficulty with regards to the purchase of the stolen NEM.

These queries were answered within 48 to 72 hours. Based on a review of some of the responses, it is apparent that the hackers weren’t native English speakers.

Circumventing the NEM Foundation Tracking Activities

After the heist, concerted efforts were made to recover the stolen funds. The NEM Foundation, a Singapore-based non-profit began tracking the stolen coins in a bid to tag any address linked to the theft.

It appears, however, that the hackers were steps ahead of the foundation’s mosaic tracking protocol. By accepting payments in bitcoin and litecoin, the tracker was unable to follow a large number of transactions.

According to reports, the tracking system required about two to three minutes to tag each NEM address. This delay meant that all the hackers had to do to get around this was to move the funds repeatedly among several accounts to throw off the mosaic tracker.

The Aftermath of the Hack

By March 21, 2018, the NEM Foundation issued a public announcement that it was disabling the mosaic tracker, a clear indication that it had failed to track the stolen NEM coins. The value of NEM tokens has taken a nosedive since the hack, falling by about 75 percent from $1 to around $0.25.

There have been calls for the NEM Foundation to implement a hard fork but they have so far pointedly refused to do so. This is based on their position that the hack had nothing to do with the NEM blockchain but with the vulnerabilities in the Coincheck security system.

The post Coincheck Hackers May Have Successfully Laundered all their Stolen NEM Coins appeared first on BTCMANAGER.

Previous Article

Comprar Bitcoin Ethereum, sin comisión [Paso a Paso]

Next Article

GMO Coin будет брать взаймы биткоины пользователей под 5% годовых

You might be interested in …

Fedcoin Could Be Coming Soon, But Would It Really Challenge Bitcoin?

Watch out Bitcoin (and Cash), Fedcoin Could Be Coming Soon

The idea of Fedcoin,” a cryptocurrency sponsored by the U.S. government and managed by the Federal Reserve, has been around for quite some time. “Imagine that the Fed, as the core developer, makes available an open-source bitcoin-like protocol (suitably modified) called Fedcoin,” a Federal Reserve VP speculated already in 2015. The idea gained traction also in Europe in connection with the financial crisis in Greece, and was notably discussed in a “Eurocoin” context by former Greek Minister of Finance Yanis Varoufakis.

Earlier this year, Nobel Prize–winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said he believes “very strongly” that the U.S. could and should move to a digital currency and get rid of physical currency. While Stiglitz is persuaded that “the main use of bitcoin has been to circumvent tax authorities and regulation,” he appeared to be in favor of digital currency technology for government.

“The technology underlying bitcoin could fundamentally change the way we think of money,” said Campbell R. Harvey, a finance professor at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, in the Washington Post. “It is only a matter of time before paper money is phased out.”

Phasing out physical cash — the reserve of drug dealers and black marketers — would be one of the main advantages of a national cryptocurrency, according to Harvey, since it would make it far more difficult for criminals to hide and launder money if all transactions could be recorded on the government’s blockchain.

The potential for privacy isn’t considered a desirable feature for state-owned cryptocurrencies. On the contrary, as Harvey argues, the introduction of digital currencies would be partly motivated by the desire to eliminate the anonymity of cash. On the other hand, even in a future Fedcoin-like, all-electronic economy, it’s easy to predict that there would be a strong black economy on the side, powered by privacy-oriented cryptocurrencies, including bitcoin, ether, Monero and other emerging alternatives able to offer stronger privacy.

“Despite the negative press about bitcoin being used for illegal transactions, bitcoin is not anonymous, and criminals who use it often do not understand that their transactions are being recorded,” notes Harvey. In fact, while a bitcoin address isn’t explicitly associated with its owner, blockchain network analysis can often de-anonymize bitcoin users. To support law enforcement, companies like Chainalysis and Elliptic offer sophisticated blockchain network analysis tools and services to trace bitcoin transactions back to their participants and de-anonymize users.

In a recent presentation, Harvey defined Fedcoin as “a digital USD currency where the complete history of all transactions is visible to the Fed via a Fed blockchain.” That blockchain technology, initially thought of as a libertarian means to escape government control, could become a killer app for governments to have complete control over the citizens, and enforce compliance and tax collection, seems surreal to say the least.

Indeed, as Saifedean Ammous, an economics professor at the Lebanese American University, told bitcoin Magazine, “The importance of bitcoin is that it makes monetary policy and payment settlement according to predetermined software, free of third-party control. This defeats the point of having a central bank, and is anathema to central banks’ mission, to control monetary policy and supervise money flows.”

In the presentation, Harvey cited economist Kenneth Rogoff’s 2016 book “The Curse of Cash,” which proposes to gradually phase out cash, eventually leaving only small notes and coins in circulation, and move to electronic money, perhaps “a government-run version of the virtual currency bitcoin.”

While Rogoff is not persuaded that the “potentially disruptive” technology of today’s cryptocurrencies is sufficiently mature, he thinks a next-generation “bitcoin 3.0” could be a precursor to a government-controlled digital currency. “If the private sector comes up with a much better way of doing things, the government will eventually adapt and regulate as necessary to eventually win out,” says Rogoff.

Ammous disagrees with this sort of argument. “The only thing central banks can do with bitcoin is accumulate it as a monetary reserve asset. At some point, central banks around the world will start asking themselves if they might be better off holding bitcoin, with its apolitical monetary policy, than other countries’ national currencies.”

Central banks have as much to learn from bitcoin’s operation as horses have to learn from car engines. It’s a technology meant to displace central control of money.

“The Fedcoin idea was presented by David Andolfatto, Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, at the first P2PFISY workshop that I organized at the Bundesbank in Frankfurt, 2015,” Paolo Tasca, executive director of the University College London Centre for Blockchain Technologies, told bitcoin Magazine.

“The idea of dispensing with cash in favor of alternative, more efficient means of payments is not new. Pre-1900 utopian thinkers devoted a lot of effort to finding a way to allow people to get rid of what Robert Owen called the ‘insane money-mystery.’ In more recent years, economists have also begun to study the implications of living in cashless societies, especially referring to the role of central banks and to the conduct of monetary policy.”

Other governments and central banks are considering their own versions of Fedcoin. Sweden’s central bank, the Riksbank, is considering whether the country should introduce a purely digital form of government-backed money, perhaps using distributed ledger technology (DLT). The proposed e-krona would be a digital complement to cash guaranteed by the state, and work as a means of payment, unit of account and store of value. It’s worth noting that usage of cash in Sweden is declining, and there are indications that the country could go entirely cashless in five years.

The Riksbank isn’t the only central bank to consider issuing its own digital currency. The central banks of Singapore, Papua New Guinea, Canada and others are considering similar moves. A recent research paper issued by the Bank of Canada, which considers a possible bitcoin standard similar to the gold standard, is especially interesting. A discussion paper published by the Bank of Finland, which describes bitcoin as a revolutionary, marvelous economic system, could indicate that the bank is considering with interest the possibility to someday launch its own digital currency. Even China’s central bank is cautiously testing a digital currency.

“Other central banks (Bank of England, Bank of Canada and European Central Bank, among others) are studying the idea of a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) as a non-ordinary monetary tool that could improve the central banks’ ability to stabilize inflation and the business cycle, and as a new payment channel that could permit tracing the network of payments and record the payment history of each individual,” added Tasca.

Another reason for governments to like the idea of a national cryptocurrency, according to both Harvey and Rogoff, is the possibility to strengthen the power of monetary policy to help manage the economy, for example by making it easier to impose negative interest rates.

Harvey notes that, were the Federal Reserve to adopt its own cryptocurrency someday, it will become a major (and far less volatile) competitor to bitcoin and other digital currencies. “In fact, it’s not clear whether [F]edcoin would want that competition, and the Fed is in a position to impose a regulatory environment that tilts the playing field,” warns Harvey.

“So watch out, bitcoin.”


The post Fedcoin Could Be Coming Soon, But Would It Really Challenge Bitcoin? appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

DZXB_W2WsAA9htT

Recent Uploads tagged blockchain DZXB_W2WsAA9htT Gold Bits Coin posted a photo: IS MY INVESTMENT SAFE FORM FRAUD⁉️ 🌞KYC and AML have been put in place at ⚡️GBC⚡️ to ensure that our investors can enjoy a […]