May 6, 2019 By Shane Schick 2 min read

The rate of cryptocurrency theft in the first quarter of 2019 has already reached 70 percent of what cybercriminals stole in all of 2018, accounting for an estimated $1.2 billion in losses, according to recent research.

A report from CipherTrace revealed that cyberthieves stole $356 million through targeted attacks on exchanges and scams that dupe people into providing access to their digital wallets. Misappropriation of funds and fraud activity led to even greater losses, totaling $851 million in 2019 so far.

In contrast, it took all of last year for cryptocurrency theft to reach $1.7 billion, suggesting that the total will be far higher by the fourth quarter.

Cryptocurrency Thieves Get Creative

The researchers noted a rise in insider threats and a wider variety of threats overall targeting cryptocurrency. Examples include the kidnapping of a Norwegian billionaire’s wife, the perpetrators of which demanded roughly $10.3 million in Monero as a ransom payment.

Other incidents involving various cryptocurrency exchanges suggest that misappropriation of funds is on the rise. One firm was responsible for $195 million in losses alone when its founder died without providing access to the exchange’s account passwords.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the report noted that regulators around the world are struggling to determine how best to protect those making payments through cryptocurrency exchanges. That means cross-border payments — transactions between an exchange based in the U.S. and one based outside of local authorities’ jurisdiction — can benefit money launderers. Offshore exchanges have already gotten $8l7 billion through cross-border payments, an increase of 46 percent over a two-year period. This represents 11.5 percent of “hidden wealth,” according to the study.

How to Curtail Cryptocurrency Theft

In 2018, IBM X-Force Research showed how criminals can use well-known malware such as Trickbot to make users think they’re putting money in their own cryptocurrency wallet when, in fact, it’s being directed to one that’s controlled by cybercriminals. Advanced malware and fraud detection tools can help identify potential risks, assess the level of severity and determine which devices have already been infected, may be the best.

More from

NIST’s role in the global tech race against AI

4 min read - Last year, the United States Secretary of Commerce announced that the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has been put in charge of launching a new public working group on artificial intelligence (AI) that will build on the success of the NIST AI Risk Management Framework to address this rapidly advancing technology.However, recent budget cuts at NIST, along with a lack of strategy implementation, have called into question the agency’s ability to lead this critical effort. Ultimately, the success…

Researchers develop malicious AI ‘worm’ targeting generative AI systems

2 min read - Researchers have created a new, never-seen-before kind of malware they call the "Morris II" worm, which uses popular AI services to spread itself, infect new systems and steal data. The name references the original Morris computer worm that wreaked havoc on the internet in 1988.The worm demonstrates the potential dangers of AI security threats and creates a new urgency around securing AI models.New worm utilizes adversarial self-replicating promptThe researchers from Cornell Tech, the Israel Institute of Technology and Intuit, used what’s…

Passwords, passkeys and familiarity bias

5 min read - As passkey (passwordless authentication) adoption proceeds, misconceptions abound. There appears to be a widespread impression that passkeys may be more convenient and less secure than passwords. The reality is that they are both more secure and more convenient — possibly a first in cybersecurity.Most of us could be forgiven for not realizing passwordless authentication is more secure than passwords. Thinking back to the first couple of use cases I was exposed to — a phone operating system (OS) and a…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today