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BIS Report Questions Whether Stablecoins, CBDCs Can Create Risks in Developing Countries

A number of emerging markets and developing economies (EMDEs) have been looking at stablecoins and central bank digital currencies (CBDC) to address weaknesses in their financial systems.

But according to a paper released Friday by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), these digital currencies may create daunting issues in these markets and not address problems that other fintech innovations are tackling.

“Stablecoin arrangements aspire to improve financial inclusion and cross-border remittances – but they are neither necessary nor sufficient to meet these policy goals,” the authors of the report, entitled What Does Digital Money Mean for Emerging Market and Developing Countries, write.”

EMDEs in Latin America and other regions have turned increasingly to stablecoins as a store of value. Stablecoins have appeal in countries where the local currencies tend to be less stable and possibly subject to capital controls because of inflation.

The Basel, Switzerland-based BIS is a 91-year organization that supports central banks’ efforts to create banking and financial stability through research and by fostering cooperation among central banks on a range of issues.

The report’s authors question whether stablecoins could “offer lasting competitive advantages over rapidly developing, evolving digital payment services,” including digital ID, e-money and mobile banking. They add that stablecoins could generate new risks related to such issues as governance, efficiency in payment processes, consumer protection and data privacy.

The authors raise concerns about CBDCs, writing that “there is a risk that in periods of systematic stress, (that) households and other agents may shift from bank deposits or other instruments into the CBDC, spurring a ‘digital run’ of unprecedented speed and scale,” and questioning “whether they are necessary or desirable for all jurisdictions.”

But the authors also write that stablecoins in particular have “drawn great – and much needed – attention to the challenges of financial inclusion and cross-border payments and remittances.” This development has underscored efforts to foster a less restrictive regulatory environment, improve “monetary and financial stability frameworks and payment infrastructures, particularly across borders.”

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Author: James Rubin

Identity Thieves Exploit El Salvador’s Chivo Bitcoin Wallet’s Setup Process

At first, Cynthia Gutierrez refused to download Chivo, the digital wallet developed by El Salvador’s government for the use of bitcoin throughout the country and released on Sept. 7.

She decided to open the app on Oct. 16 after learning from fellow Salvadorans that hackers had activated wallets associated with the nine-digit numbers on their identity cards, known as DUI for its acronym in Spanish.

“This was growing more and more, reaching into my close circle,” Gutierrez, 28, told CoinDesk.

When Gutierrez entered her personal information, a screen popped up saying her document number was already associated with a wallet. Immediately, she took a screenshot, fearing that her data would be used for illicit purposes.

Gutierrez’s case is one of the hundreds that Salvadorans have reported on social media and to local advocates since September, when bitcoin was established as legal tender and Chivo started being massively used in the country.

Between Oct. 9 and Oct. 14, Cristosal, a human rights organization in El Salvador, received 755 notifications of Salvadorans reporting identity theft with their Chivo Wallets, Rina Montti, the group’s director of human rights research, told CoinDesk.

In the majority of those cases, the affected Salvadorans tried to activate their wallets after they learned of the large number of people reporting that their identities had been stolen.

The hackers had an incentive: Each wallet came loaded with $30 worth of bitcoin, provided by the administration of Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele to encourage citizens to use the cryptocurrency.

El Salvador’s government did not respond to a request for comment about claims of identity theft involving the wallets by press time.

With the adoption of bitcoin, Bukele positioned his Central American country at the center of a global discussion about the future of money. The process was not without its critics, such as those made against Article 7 of the law, which stipulates that all merchants must accept bitcoin as a form of payment when customers offer it.

The president later denied that bitcoin acceptance would be mandatory. Salvadorans were baffled by the discrepancy between what the president said and what the law stated.

In August, polls showed that 65% to 70% of Salvadorans opposed the adoption of bitcoin, and several protest marches took place in the streets. According to the latest official data provided by Bukele at the end of September, more than 2 million people downloaded the Chivo Wallet, as part of an aggressive agenda that also included bitcoin mining with volcanic energy.

Easy to fool

According to Chivo’s official website, opening an account requires scanning the DUI front and back, and then performing facial recognition to check the registrant’s identity. But several Salvadorans reported evidence that the system is flawed.

When Adam Flores, a Salvadoran YouTuber who runs the channel La Gatada SV, heard about the hacks, he remembered that his grandmother had not opened her Chivo Wallet and decided to use the case as a test. Even though he only had a photocopy of her DUI, he tried it anyway and, to his amazement, the application accepted the document as valid.

Flores followed through with the verification process, which then asked for real-time facial recognition. The YouTuber snapped a photo of a poster on his wall of Sarah Connor — a character from the “Terminator” movie series.

Seconds later, Chivo Wallet welcomed his grandmother and released the $30 incentive, according to a video Flores sent to CoinDesk as evidence.

Other cases uploaded to social media directly showed how just a random photo — in one case, of a coffee mug — was enough to replace the DUI and then fool the face recognition test.

Salvadorans do not always try to open their accounts themselves. According to Montti, of Cristosal, most of the 700 Salvadorans who reported identity theft asked acquaintances to try to transfer money through Chivo by putting their DUI numbers in the recipient field. They discovered the addresses were ready to receive transfers. In other words, the ID numbers were already registered, by someone other than the rightful owner.

Worried about impersonation, Ramón Esquivel asked an acquaintance to send money to a wallet with his DUI on Oct. 11. To his surprise, the transfer was successful, even though he had never activated his account.

“With anger, I realized that they had used my DUI,” Esquivel told CoinDesk, adding that after the episode he filed a complaint in the attorney general’s office. “I’m exposed to being used to commit acts of money laundering that would be registered under my identity, compromising my integrity,” he stated.

Other cases showed that the fraudsters diverted the money to accounts that were not even their own, but those of other hacked people.

Customer support

Two weeks ago, Gabriela Sosa, a Salvadoran media host, tried to activate a Chivo Wallet with her DUI, but an error message jumped up on the screen informing her it was already registered.

As soon as it happened, she called the official support number for Chivo, 192. “I kept calling for several days until they told me I had to go to a Chivo point,” Sosa told CoinDesk. Last Saturday, she went to that help center and her account was finally recovered, but the money was not.

On her Twitter account, Sosa released details of the account to which the $30 had been directed. The owner’s name was Michael Santacruz.

Days later, co-workers and university colleagues sent screenshots of that tweet to Santacruz, who had never activated his Chivo account until then, according to private chat messages he sent to Sosa that she posted.

He tried, then, to open his account but a notification said his DUI had already been registered. Like Sosa, Santacruz approached a Chivo help center, and after recovering his account, he realized that it had been used to receive money from five hacked accounts, he said. (Attempts to reach Santacruz for comment were unsuccessful.)

Transactions made from Michael Santacruz's wallet. (Gabriela Sosa)

Cristosal was not the only nongovernmental organization (NGO) to tackle the problem. Acción Ciudadana, a non-profit specializing in social auditing, filed a notice to the Attorney General’s Office (FGR) on Oct. 12 after the group’s President Humberto Sáenz and Director Eduardo Escobar found hackers had registered their Chivo Wallets.

Acción Ciudadana told CoinDesk that up to now, two weeks after the filing, there was no response from the FGR.

Laura Nathalie Hernández, a tech lawyer at the Salvadoran firm Legal Novis, has been receiving requests for help from victims of identity theft regarding their Chivo Wallets. The first recommendation she gave to the affected people was to post the incident on social media to make it public and also file a report with the attorney general’s office.

According to Hernández, the entity that manages the application should be the first place to turn to. “But we don’t have much information about who is responsible either,” she said, adding: “We don’t know who manages it, if there is a third company. There has been no transparency.”

Unclear accountability

According to Chivo’s terms and conditions, the authorization of an account is conditioned on a know-your-customer (KYC) process carried out by CHIVO S.A. de C.V., a private company created by the government to launch the wallet. This verification process “includes the provision of the information and documents required for full compliance with the process.”

The company’s accountability is unclear. According to the terms and conditions, users agree “not to disclose or divulge to third parties any information, DUIs, passwords or any code used to access the site.” But the terms also state that it “will not be liable for any loss or damage that the user may suffer as a result of unauthorized third party access to your account as a result of hacks or lost passwords.”

Chivo’s support staff did not answer CoinDesk’s questions about who is responsible for a hack where the real account owner does not provide information.

The wallet adds that the verification services will be provided by the company directly and/or through a third party contracted by the company for such purpose. But by press time, it had not answered CoinDesk’s question about what other third party provides identification services to the platform.

Sosa, the Salvadoran media host, told CoinDesk that she eventually got her money back and emphasized that her complaint is not against the application or Bukele’s government, just that she wants to raise awareness of the problem.

Gutierrez has not yet recouped her money. “I tried to contact customer service, and they did not give me an answer, nor is there an institution that is clear about the process to follow in this case,” she said.

Esquivel said he is not interested in either the $30 incentive or the government app.

“If I use bitcoin at all, it will be with a wallet in which I have custody of my money,” he said.

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Author: Andrés Engler

Argentine exchange Buenbit now offering crypto trading app in Peru

Argentinean crypto exchange Buenbit made its consumer-focused crypto trading app available in Peru this week, aiming to give residents of that country more alternatives to save and invest in light of increased inflation in recent months.

“Over the long term, the intention is to establish ourselves as a successful fintech in the same way as in Argentina, and to be among the most-used platforms in the country,” Buenbit CEO Federico Ogue said in a press release. 

The mobile app, available for iOS and Android, offers Peruvians the ability to trade the following cryptocurrencies: BTC, ETH, DAI, ADA, MATIC, SOL, DOT and BNB. The app supports transfers to local bank accounts in Peru, and supports both U.S. dollars as well as the Peruvian Sol. Buenbit adds that 95% of its funds are in cold wallets.

Buenbit, founded in 2018, announced in June that it had raised $11 million in a Series A funding round led by London-based Libertus Capital. It has about 470,000 customers in Argentina and Peru.

The exchange first broke into the Peruvian market in May with the launch of its Buenbit PRO trading platform for businesses doing over-the-counter (OTC) trading. That product launched with support for BTC, ETH and DAI. 

Buenbit hopes to continue expanding into Latin America’s biggest fintech markets, including Mexico, Brazil and Colombia. In a recent interview with the Block, Ogue said that the exchange hopes to complete a sizable Series B funding round by the end of the year with new investors. 

Buenbit is hoping that Peruvians will turn to cryptocurrencies in light of the country’s current economic environment. According to Peru’s national statistics institute (INEI for its name in Spanish), the country saw inflation of 5.23% between Oct. 2020 and Sept. 2021 — the highest annual rate in more than 12 years according to Lima-based newspaper El Comercio.

Meanwhile, the wider region of Latin America has also grappled with price increases since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

Buenbit has found success in its home of Argentina, where the volatile peso currency and restrictions on obtaining dollars make a case for alternative methods of saving and investing. As a result, Buenbit has diversified its products there with products like a prepaid Mastercard, which can be loaded with Argentine pesos purchased with crypto using a single app.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kristin Majcher

Streamlining blockchain data access

Quick Take

  • For Web3 to take shape and take off, it is vital to have reliable blockchain infrastructure in place to bring blockchain data to apps
  • In a cross-chain future, we should have solutions to efficiently access and use blockchain data, conveniently access data across multiple blockchains, and decentralize these processes
  • Here, we describe how two decentralized network protocols — The Graph and Pocket Network — are addressing these challenges
  • We compare these protocols to centralized blockchain infrastructure providers like Infura and Alchemy to highlight their respective strengths and weaknesses

This research piece is available to
members of The Block Genesis.
You can continue reading
this Genesis research on The Block.

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Author: Hiroki Kotabe

Ether alcanza un récord de $4400 mientras shiba inu se convierte en uno de los principales quemadores de ETH

Ether (ETH) registró un nuevo máximo histórico el viernes, ya que los datos de la blockchain mostraron que Ethereum quemó más tokens de los que emitió en las últimas 24 horas, en parte gracias a la fuerte actividad de shiba inu (SHIB).

El token nativo de la blockchain de Ethereum subió a $4402 durante las horas asiáticas, superando el anterior récord de $4.379 alcanzado en mayo, según los datos de CoinDesk.

A un precio de $4.370, la criptomoneda ha subido 45% en lo que va de octubre, frente a la ganancia de 40% de bitcoin. El diferencial de volatilidad implícita de ether y bitcoin está aumentando, lo que indica que el mercado espera que ether continúe liderando la evolución de los precios en las próximas semanas, como se mencionó en el newsletter First Mover del jueves.

Los datos rastreados por Tokenview muestran que Ethereum produjo 15.109,34 ETH y quemó 16.710,2 ETH en las últimas 24 horas. Esto supone una reducción de la oferta neta de 1600 ETH.

Shiba inu, la plataforma detrás del autoproclamado destructor de dogecoin, quemó 770,12 ETH y se convirtió en el tercer mayor destructor de ETH. Uniswap v.2 y Tether destruyeron 2.729,22 y 1.248,72 ETH, respectivamente.

SHIB ha tenido una asombrosa suba de 800% este mes y alcanzó un máximo histórico de $0,00008870. Según Defi Llama, el valor total depositado en ShibaSwap, un exchange descentralizado que permite a los usuarios apostar por SHIB, se ha duplicado hasta los $512 millones este mes.

La quema de monedas se refiere al proceso de retiro de tokens de circulación y es el equivalente del mercado de criptomonedas a una recompra de acciones.

La Propuesta de Mejora de Ethereum (EIP) 1559 implementada el 5 de agosto quema una parte de las tasas pagadas a los mineros, eliminando una parte notable de monedas de circulación. La actualización ha vinculado la cantidad de ether quemado con el uso de la red.

Desde su activación, la actualización ha destruido 668.339 ETH, lo que representa más del 50% de las nuevas monedas emitidas en el mismo periodo.

Algunos operadores de opciones están apostando a que los reguladores estadounidenses aprueben pronto un fondo cotizado en bolsa (ETF) basado en futuros y están adquiriendo opciones de compra out-of-the-money baratas previendo un repunte del precio. Los datos que rastrea Laevitas muestran que la opción de compra de ETH a $15.000 que vence en marzo ha atraído una fuerte demanda en los últimos días.

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Author: Omkar Godbole

The DOJ is looking for someone to helm its new crypto enforcement team

The Department of Justice is looking for a supervisory trial attorney to helm its National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team (NCET).

According to a new job posting from the DOJ, the team is focused on “supporting, investigating, and prosecuting crimes involving cryptocurrency and to lead the Department’s efforts to reduce the use of cryptocurrency as a criminal tool.” The agency is looking for an attorney to act as director of the team.

The director will lead a team of attorneys by setting strategic priorities for crypto investigations and enforcement cases with the help of U.S. Attorney’s Offices and investigative agencies, as well as maintaining relationships with federal, state and local branches of law enforcement to coordinate the sharing of information and strategies among them. This includes interactions with some policy setting bodies, like the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The posting also calls for the director to foster private sector relationships to aid enforcement. 

The efforts furthered by the NCET is a “central part of a nationwide enforcement effort to combat the use of cryptocurrency as an illicit tool,” according to the posting.

Those considered will have to have “extensive knowledge” of crypto and blockchain technology, according to the posting. The DOJ is also looking for someone with an understanding of white collar and money laundering statutes. 

The DOJ announced the creation of the NCET earlier this month. In that announcement, the DOJ detailed that the head of the NCET will report to the Assistant Attorney General in the Criminal Division. The team will be assembled from the Department of Justice Criminal Division’s Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section (MLARS), Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS) and other sections in the division with the leader overseeing the coordination among these branches and their NCET-designated attorneys. 

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Aislinn Keely

Market Wrap: Ether Hits New High, Outperforms Bitcoin as Altcoins Rally

Ether, the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, reached a new all-time price high of around $4,400 on Friday, topping the previous record high of $4,379 in May, according to CoinDesk data.

ETH is up about 11% over the past week, compared to a 3% rise in BTC over the same period. Technical charts indicate further upside for ether relative to bitcoin, with an upside target toward 0.08 in the ETH/BTC price ratio as discussed in yesterday’s Market Wrap.

Overall, analysts expect further upside for cryptocurrencies for the remainder of the year despite occasional pullbacks, which can lead to choppy trading conditions.

“Bitcoin and major altcoins are experiencing strong volatility on the intraday chart, which is normal at all-time-high levels, like we have seen lately,” Lukas Enzersdorfer-Konrad, Bitpanda chief product officer, wrote in an email to CoinDesk.

“The last negative days failed to damage the overall market structure, and fundamentals further indicate that the long term remains decisively bullish,” Enzersdorfer-Konrad wrote.

Latest prices

  • Bitcoin (BTC): $62,346, +1.70%
  • Ether (ETH): $4,394, +3.08%
  • S&P 500: $4,605, +0.19%
  • Gold: $1,782, -0.97%
  • 10-year Treasury yield closed at 1.55%

The great rotation

Despite recent volatility, some traders are starting to position for further upside in alternative cryptocurrencies (altcoins) such as ether.

“Lately, there has been an increasing number of conversations among investors around shifting portfolio allocations from bitcoin to altcoins to capture the higher returns alts have provided during more speculative risk-on periods,” FundStrat, a global advisory firm, wrote in a Thursday newsletter.

“The good news (for BTC and ETH price) is that the tides appear to be shifting towards a more risk-on fall in traditional markets,” FundStrat wrote.

Ether’s record high

Ether’s new price high coincided with improving blockchain data. The smart-contract Ethereum blockchain burned more tokens than it emitted in the last 24 hours, thanks partly to strong action in shiba inu (SHIB), CoinDesk’s Omkar Godbole reported.

Shiba Inu, the platform behind the self-proclaimed dogecoin killer, burnt 770.12 ETH, becoming the third-largest ETH destroyer. Uniswap v.2 and Tether destroyed 2,729.22 and 1,248.72 ETH, respectively.

And some options traders are betting U.S. regulators will soon approve an ether futures-based exchange-traded fund (ETF) and so are buying cheap out-of-the-money calls in anticipation of a price rally.

High network demand

The chart below shows the recent rise in the Ethereum gas price, which refers to the cost of performing transactions on the blockchain network.

“Historically, when gas gets expensive, we’ve seen activity spike on alternative L1s [layer 1]. But now that Arbitrum and Optimism are live, L2s [layer two] could wind up being the primary beneficiaries,” crypto research firm Delphi Digital wrote in a blog post.

Altcoin roundup

  • Decentraland’s MANA surged 80% in 24h: MANA, Decentraland’s native token, surged 80% in one day to a market capitalization of more than $2 billion, CoinDesk’s Lyllah Ledesma reported. This comes after Facebook’s announcement on Thursday afternoon that the company changed its corporate name to Meta to signal an increasing focus on the metaverse, which apparently spurred the jump.
  • Here’s why a CryptoPunk sold for $530 million: A Twitter bot that tracks sales of CryptoPunks flagged a transaction that showed the sale of one CryptoPunk non-fungible token (NFT) for a staggering half-billion dollars, CoinDesk’s Andrew Thurman reported. But while the purchase would’ve been one of the largest art sales in history, on-chain analysts were quick to point out the sale was just a clever bit of smart contract magic.
  • XRP gets wrapped by Tokensoft for Ethereum DeFi debut: Tokensoft’s Wrapped is taking a multi-custodial approach by partnering with Hex Trust on wXRP, CoinDesk’s Ian Allison reported. The new connectivity for XRP holders will allow access to various DeFi applications, whether that’s lending, borrowing or for use in automated market makers, CEO of Tokensoft Mason Borda said. Wrapped has previously wrapped a number of tokens, including bitcoin, zcash, filecoin and others.

Relevant news

Other markets

Most digital assets in the CoinDesk 20 ended the day higher.

Notable winners as of 21:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET):

  • The Graph (GRT): +3.36%
  • Polkadot (DOT): +3.32%
  • Stellar (XLM): +3.10%

Notable losers:

  • Dogecoin (DOGE): -6.26%
  • Aave, (AAVE): -2.61%
  • Polygon (MATIC): -1.17%

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Author: Damanick Dantes, Helene Braun

Christopher Giancarlo: Crypto’s Advocate in DC

Christopher Giancarlo is the former chairman of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and founding principal of the Digital Dollar Foundation, a group that supports the U.S. adopting a digital currency.

This episode is sponsored by Quantstamp.

Giancarlo has written a book and he came on our “Money Reimagined” podcast recently to talk about it. The book is called “Crypto Dad,” which is a nod to the affectionate nickname that members of the crypto community started giving Chris when, as head of the CFTC, he made some regulatory moves that were seen as constructive to the industry, such as the approval of bitcoin futures, which was a contentious move at the time.

The book is packed with inside-the-Beltway insights into the sausage-making behind regulation. It’s also a great primer for understanding the challenges that the U.S. faces as the technology around money goes through a dramatic transformation.

And it makes a very strong case for the federal government to act proactively to support crypto technology in a way that preserves core U.S. values.

It’s timely because right now the regulatory conversation around crypto is front and center. Just last week, the first bitcoin futures exchange-traded fund was launched after the Securities and Exchange Commission gave it the green light after years of resistance to launching a bitcoin ETF that holds physical bitcoin. Ironically, the ETF version the SEC approved is focused on bitcoin futures, a product Giancarlo’s CFTC set in motion.

But if that sounds like the SEC is now seen as a friendlier force by the crypto community, think again. Many view with concern the rather harsh tone the current SEC chairman, Gary Gensler, has taken with the industry.

There’s a lot at stake here. Not just for investors but for geopolitics, too.

This episode was produced and edited by Michele Musso with announcements by Adam B. Levine and additional support by Eleanor Pahl. Our theme song is “Shepard.”

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Author: Michael J. Casey, Sheila Warren

Everything You Need to Know About Facebook’s ‘Meta’ Metaverse Play

This episode is sponsored by NYDIG.

Download this episode

Facebook announced yesterday it is changing its corporate name to Meta. The name change reflects the company’s growing focus on virtual reality, augmented reality and a new version of the internet that people are calling the metaverse. In this episode, NLW looks at the reactions to the news, from those who think it represents a huge mainstreaming opportunity for crypto and non-fungible tokens to those who see it as potentially devastating for the future of the internet.

See also: Decentraland’s MANA Jumps 80% as Facebook Rebrand Fuels Metaverse Bets

“The Breakdown” is written, produced by and features Nathaniel Whittemore aka NLW, with editing by Rob Mitchell, research by Scott Hill and additional production support by Eleanor Pahl. Adam B. Levine is our executive producer and our theme music is “Countdown” by Neon Beach. The music you heard today behind our sponsor is “Dark Crazed Cap” by Isaac Joel. Image credit: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Getty Images, modified by CoinDesk.

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Author: Nathaniel Whittemore

Email scams are catching crypto investors offguard and stealing millions

A recent wave of email scams is catching crypto investors off-guard and stealing millions of dollars in cryptocurrency.

Friday morning, it appeared that one such email scam was behind the theft of some $60 million in ETH from a dog-themed crypto project during its token sale.

One of the persons behind the project shared a screenshot of an email they received containing an attachment. The email looked like it was from a prominent crypto investor but it wasn’t their real email address. It contained a PDF file that was presented as an investment deck, which may have contained malware. This malware may have managed to access the crypto wallets controlling the funds before sending them to another address.

Since then, the malicious PDF has been sent to security firm Kaspersky for analysis and the project says it has gotten in touch with Chainalysis to monitor the movement of the seemingly stolen funds.

This project wasn’t the only target, however.

VC firms County Capital and Sneaky Ventures both shared tweets showing that they, too, received the same phishing email. The one sent to County Capital was also sent to VC firm Sino Global Capital, additional screenshots show.

Inspired by a previous phishing attack

The individuals behind the attack posted a message on the Ethereum blockchain, which said that they were inspired by a similar phishing attack.

This was the attack against trading firm mgnr that happened earlier this month. In this attack, an email was made to look like a VC investor had shared a Google Docs file with them.

The intrusion was probably used to implant a key logger and steal credentials to a password manager where we had (stupidly) shared a [private key] as temporary hot wallet between a few team members,” the firm said. Mgnr added that they were aware of two other crypto firms receiving similar phishing emails with documents pretending to be from the same VC firm.

A pseudonymous crypto investor by the name of mewn — part of investing group eGirl Capital — pointed out that these attacks are targeting specific crypto individuals with specialized knowledge of crypto news.

“This to me is like a big red alert to everyone in the space to be very careful,” they tweeted.

The individuals behind today’s hack said, in a message on the blockchain, that they were not the same people that phished mgnr. But they added that they were inspired by it.

How does this type of attack work?

In order to understand how a phishing attack like this works and how it can be so successful, The Block spoke with Oren Falkowitz, founder of Area 1 Security and former analyst at the NSA.

Falkowitz explained that, typically, these emails would be made to look like they are coming from a prominent person or company, to make them appear more believable. In the cases mentioned above, the emails appeared to look like they were from notable crypto investors.

On how they lead to the damage, Falkowitz said that the links within the emails might not be what they seem. While the document might appear to be a PDF file — by having “.PDF” at the end of the filename — it may actually be a very different type of file. What it could be is an executable file that contains a series of instructions for the computer to perform a task. This is similar to downloading and installing software.

Once installed, it may be a piece of code that takes instructions from another computer, such as downloading further malicious software. Through this, the code could get access to a keylogger or other services that could observe activity on the computer.

Once the attacker is able to obtain this kind of access, it becomes much easier for them to intercept any kind of private blockchain data in order to get access to the victim’s cryptocurrency holdings.

For more breaking stories like this, make sure to follow The Block on Twitter.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Tim Copeland


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