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posted by Fnord666 on Sunday January 28 2018, @09:07AM   Printer-friendly
from the keep-your-private-keys-offline dept.

There's a new contender for the largest theft of cryptocurrency ever:

A Japanese cryptocurrency exchange announced the theft Friday of $400 million in digital currency. Some estimates put the loss at the Coincheck exchange at over $520 million.

The stolen assets were stored in the cryptocurrency NEM, one of hundreds of digital currencies created in recent years. Bitcoin, the most well-known cryptocurrency, dropped precipitously on news of the hack but has since regained much of its value.

The incident could be one of the largest single losses of cryptocurrency ever, rivaling only the 2014 hack of online exchange Mt. Gox. Reports at the time put Mt. Gox's losses at over $400 million.

Coincheck says 500 million digital coins were lost. According to Cointelgraph, hackers stole the private key protecting access to Coincheck's accounts.

Does it matter that it was a $400 million theft if the value is going to collapse anyway?

Meanwhile, a stock trading app called Robinhood plans to allow users to buy and sell Bitcoin and Ethereum without any transaction fees.


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  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by JoeMerchant on Sunday January 28 2018, @03:54PM (1 child)

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Sunday January 28 2018, @03:54PM (#629478)

    Carlo Pietro Giovanni Guglielmo Tebaldo Ponzi would have wept tears of joy at the beauty of it:

    No central owner / top of the pyramid to villify and convict.

    All "potential victims" are willfully buying into something that clearly advertises no intrinsic value.

    Once "in" the only way "out" for investors of cash or effort is to find another investor to exchange cash for "secret" numbers in a computer.

    Unlimited inventory, sure the "algorithm" drives a sense of scarcity that inflates the perceived value, but the whole scheme can be "warehoused" on a tiny little disc drive.

    Open source, others are freely copying the scheme, diluting attention and making enforcement of any yet-to-be conceived regulations more challenging.

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  • (Score: 2) by realDonaldTrump on Monday January 29 2018, @12:40AM

    by realDonaldTrump (6614) on Monday January 29 2018, @12:40AM (#629654) Homepage Journal

    They call it distributed. Our Federal Reserve System is distributed too. Little Rocket Man nukes San Francisco, nukes Los Angeles, nukes Chicago, nukes New York City, it's no problem for our Federal Reserve. Because that leaves 8 banks. Beautiful system!!!!