February 16, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Die Zentralisierung der Krypto-Ökonomie: Warum Satoshi Nakamotos Vision in der Krise steckt

BTC-ECHO
Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt

Die Zentralisierung der Krypto-Ökonomie: Warum Satoshi Nakamotos Vision in der Krise steckt
Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt
Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise stecktNicht mehr den Institutionen, Banken und großen Unternehmen vertrauen müssen, wenn man nicht will. Eine Alternative schaffen zu können, ein Substitut, das auf neutraler Mathematik beruht und nicht technokratisch, zentralistischer Konstituierung. Mit diesen Versprechen ist erstmalig Satoshi Nakamoto in den Ring gestiegen. Nun, zehn Jahre später, sind es genau die „Alten“, das tradierte Finanzsystem und […]
 
Source: BTC-ECHO

Der Beitrag Die Zentralisierung der Krypto-Ökonomie: Warum Satoshi Nakamotos Vision in der Krise steckt erschien zuerst auf BTC-ECHO.

Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt Die zentralisierung der krypto-ökonomie: warum satoshi nakamotos vision in der krise steckt

Previous Article

СМИ: руководство Scalar Capital могло повлиять на листинг токена 0x на Coinbase

Next Article

암호화폐 (1) #Cryptocurrency

You might be interested in …

The Crypto Show Mystery Guest

On tonight’s episode of “The Crypto Show,” Danny and Chris are their own guests. We talk about the Texas bitcoin Conference, Dash and bitcoin ATMs, remittance payments and their relation to our upcoming Dash proposal, alt36, and Danny’s eventual trip to Mexico City to help with relief efforts and his trip to the upcoming cannabis convention.

http://TexasBitcoinConference.com coupon code: CRYPTO

Sponsored by: Dash, CryptoCompare and Defense Distributed

Links

LogosRadioNetwork

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119365597/ref=cm_sw_r_sms_c_api_IQPczbQHWJKP8

TheCryptoShow

FreeRoss

Social Media

The Crypto Show on Facebook

@TheCryptoShow

@The_Crypto_Show

@the_crypto_show instagram

The Crypto Show YouTube

Tip with Crypto

BTC: 139R6K7fxTYaFf2aXTid84Le1ayqMVvSCq

Dash: XqDeHnokQocBpvffsa2dWz8mX7oTKpoKzc

LTC: LUTJtk4QqXLiDkK8pDKK3jM73VVwbp7oSr

Doge: DQBJ7PSpFzUTwpBrny46Kug4BW8AGtq1YQ

LTBC: 1CevFxMT6srBtTkWx2qrNaJmjtgxbo7pBA,,,ETH: 0x10cfd6916832566e82b3ab38cc6741dfd7e6164fo

After Second Hack This Year, South Korean Exchange Youbit Closes Down

After Second Hack This Year, South Korean Exchange Youbit Closes Down

South Korean exchange Youbit announced on its website today that it is closing down after a hack early Tuesday, December 19, 2017, that resulted in the loss of 17 percent of its assets.

The exchange, previously known as Yapizon, did not indicate how many bitcoins or other cryptocurrencies were stolen or what the total fiat value of the attack amounted to, but it was enough to lead to bankruptcy.

This was the second hack the exchange suffered this year. A prior attack in April 2017, resulted in the loss of 3,816 bitcoins, worth around $5 million at the time.

Youbit said hackers broke into its hot wallet, the online account used to pay out cryptocurrencies instantly. While hot wallets offer greater convenience, they also put funds at greater risk because they are connected to the internet.

The remaining coins were kept offline in a cold wallet, the exchange said, resulting in no additional losses. The exchange indicated that customers could withdraw up to 75 percent of their balances, and the rest would be tallied out after the final settlement.

Korea Internet & Security Agency (KISA), the state agency that responds to cyberattacks, is investigating the incident, as reported in Reuters. KISA has maintained that North Korean hackers were behind the first hack.

Chris Doman, threat engineer at software security company AlienVault, told bitcoin Magazine, he suspects BlueNoroff, a subgroup of North Korea’s cyber crime group Lazarus is responsible for the second Youbit attack. Lazarus is known for the November 2014 hack on Sony Pictures Entertainment, one of the biggest corporate breaches in history.

While attacks by Lazarus have mainly been aimed at social disruption, recent reports indicate the group is increasingly going after money. With the value of bitcoin surging to all-time highs, exchanges are becoming a lucrative target.

“The first time I saw them target a bitcoin company was in May this year — the same month they unleashed WannaCry,” Doman said in a statement shared with bitcoin Magazine.

The exchange that Doman was refering to is South Korean bitcoin exchange Bithumb. Around that same time, WannaCry ransomware attacks were encrypting user’s computers and offering to de-encrypt them in exchange for bitcoin. Analysis of the techniques used in the WannaCry attacks show strong links to Lazarus.  

Doman added, “They’ve also used related malware to opportunistically mine Monero coins on compromised servers. Clearly they have a large interest in cryptocurrencies as an easy method for economic gain, as well as an opportunity to economically weaken their enemies.”

Although Youbit is one of the smaller bitcoin exchanges, the hack underscores the risk involved in leaving funds on an exchange, where control of those funds is handed over to a third party and is only as safe as whatever security measures that exchange chooses to use.

Throughout the history of bitcoin, hacks have amounted to painful losses. When bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox began liquidation proceedings in April 2014, the company announced that approximately 850,000 bitcoins were missing, an amount valued at more than $450 million at the time. In August 2016, the bitcoin exchange Bitfinex announced hackers stole approximately 120,000 BTC, worth $72 million at the time.

The post After Second Hack This Year, South Korean Exchange Youbit Closes Down appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.