Blockchain is a form of decentralized digital ledger that can make transactions safe and secure, but cryptocurrency exchanges that trade bitcoins and other virtual currencies that are based on this technology have been hacked because they are not working on secure networks, experts say.
Late last week, the Tokyo-based Coincheck exchange reported a 58 billion yen ($530 million) loss of cryptocurrency due to hacking. The Coincheck exchange has halted trading of the stolen currency, called NEM, and restricted dealings in most other cryptocurrencies. It was the second major hacking assault on a Japanese crypto exchange after the Mt. Gox debacle in 2014.
Here's a look at the security concerns surrounding cryptocurrencies.
What Is Blockchain?
As its name implies, blockchain is an expanding chain of digital "blocks" that contain records of transactions. Each such block is connected to those before and behind it, making it difficult for an outsider to tamper with because a hacker would need to change the block containing that record and all those linked to it to avoid detection, says Curtis Miles at IBM Blockchain. The records on a blockchain are secured through cryptography and network participants have their own personal keys that are assigned to the transactions they make, acting as personal digital signatures. Any changes will make those signatures invalid and alert others in the network to the changes. Blockchains are kept in so-called "peer-to-peer" networks that are continually updated and kept in synchronization. Hacking into the transactions would require massive amounts of computing power to access every block in a certain blockchain and alter all its blocks simultaneously.
Poor Security
While a blockchain can be secure, the exchanges that play a crucial role in increasing the amount of crypto trading, enabling bitcoin and other such currencies to go mainstream, do not use the same technology, says Simon Choi, a director at anti-virus software company Hauri Inc. South Korean exchanges reportedly got poor reviews for cybersecurity, and officials have fined them for failing to beef up precautions. "If security on the exchanges' is not secure, their currencies can be stolen," Choi said. "If the exchanges are to play their intermediary role, they should be as safe as banks and strengthen their security."
Rising Hacks
According to cryptocurrency research firm Chainalysis, losses of bitcoin, including thefts of individuals' holdings through scams, malicious computer software known as ransomware and hacks, increased at least 30 times to $95 million in 2016 from at least $3 million in 2013.
The attack on Coincheck, which did not affect its holdings of bitcoin, was the second major hacking assault on a Japanese crypto exchange after Mt. Gox, the world's largest bitcoin trading exchange before its collapse, lost hundreds of thousands of bitcoins likely stolen through hacking.
Coincheck has apologized and promised to reimburse customers for their NEM losses. It has pledged to comply with a Financial Services Agency's order to determine why the losses happened, and improve its security to prevent a recurrence.
Details of how the losses happened or who might be behind them are still unclear.
The Mt. Gox case put many Japanese investors off bitcoin, at least for a time, and prompted authorities to impose more regulations. Chainalysis estimates that the bitcoins lost at Mt. Gox were worth $7.5 million when they were stolen but were worth nearly $10 billion as of January.
Identifying Hackers
It's possible to trace blockchain transactions but not to identify the owners of the "wallets" where the cryptocurrencies are kept, says Choi.
"It's the biggest weakness," said Choi. "You can track the blocks based on the records in the blocks but you cannot tell whose wallet it is. They went to hackers' wallet but if we don't know who the hackers are we cannot catch them."
The hacks have prompted the crypto community to seek ways to halt the bad guys.
South Korea's government is trying to make crypto transactions traceable by implementing a system that links crypto accounts to existing bank accounts that have been vetted by financial institutions. Such efforts, however, will not help identify hackers if they send cryptocurrencies to exchanges outside Korea that do not identify their users.
www.networkworld.com
No comments:
Post a Comment