Showing posts with label cryptocurrency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cryptocurrency. Show all posts

Thursday, February 17, 2022

Criminals had $11 billion worth illicit cryptocurrencies in 2021

 

Cryptographic forms of money have made lawbreakers more extravagant and in 2021, crooks held $11 billion worth of assets with known unlawful sources, contrasted with just $3 billion toward the finish of 2020, another report has uncovered.

As of the finish of 2021, taken assets represent 93% of every single lawbreaker total, at $9.8 billion.

Dim Net market reserves are next at $448 million, trailed by tricks at $192 million, extortion shops at $66 million, and ransomware at $30 million, reports Blockchain information organization Chainalysis.

Criminal adjusts likewise vacillated over time, from a low of $6.6 billion in July to a high of $14.8 billion in October.

"The changes are a token of the significance of speed in digital currency examinations, as criminal finances that have been effectively followed on the Blockchain can be sold rapidly," the report referenced.

This year, their has been an enormous drop in criminal adjusts in February because of the US Department of Justice's $3.6 billion capture of Bitcoin taken in the 2016 Bitfinex hack.

"Following that seizure, criminal surpluses at present stand at generally $5 billion as of February 9, 2022," the report noted.

In general, Chainalysis has recognized 4,068 crook whales holding more than $25 billion worth of cryptographic money.

Friday, October 18, 2019

Sound legal basis a must for digital monies like Facebook's Libra: G7

Company News

Facebook's proposed digital currency must have legal and regulatory issues worked out in key economies before it can be put into use, the Group of Seven economies said Thursday.
In a new report on stablecoins -- a type of digital currency backed by reserves assets -- the G7 also urged regulators to coordinate their work to prevent issuers from seeking out the most favorable country from which to operate.
"For stablecoin developers, a sound legal basis in all relevant jurisdictions... is an absolute prerequisite," according to the report from the G7 working group led by Benoit Coeure, a European Central Bank board member.
Facebook's Libra has generated intense scrutiny from officials worldwide who worry about the impact it could have on the financial system.France's Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire is due to hold a news conference to discuss the report's findings.
Digital currencies are ripe for use by terrorist organizations or for money laundering, so developers must have "legal clarity" about "all participants in the stablecoin ecosystem, such as coin holders and issuers," the report said.
They also pose other challenges to the financial system and to banks, if they are adopted widely.
"Ambiguous rights and obligations could make the stablecoin arrangement vulnerable to loss of confidence -- an unacceptable risk, especially in a payment system of potentially global importance," the report said.

 The G7 called said national regulators "must coordinate across agencies, sectors and jurisdictions," to address the risks and "forestall harmful regulatory arbitrage." "These risks, which are of a systemic nature.