$5M In Bitcoins Stolen In Bitstamp Hack

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  • jjgold
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 07-20-05
    • 388179

    #1
    $5M In Bitcoins Stolen In Bitstamp Hack
    Bitstamp, the European bitcoin exchange, confirmed Monday about $5 million in bitcoins was stolen from its hot wallets. The exchange was taken offline after the theft of 18,866 bitcoins was discovered.
    Bitstamp CEO Nejc Kodrič said the hack occurred Sunday but customer accounts "will be honored in full."
    To restate: the bulk of our bitcoin are in cold storage, and remain completely safe
  • raiders72001
    Senior Member
    • 08-10-05
    • 11126

    #2
    I use two factor authentication for my wallets. You can also use 2FA with bitcoin books.
    Comment
    • jjgold
      SBR Aristocracy
      • 07-20-05
      • 388179

      #3
      seems this was not too bad because company had some good safety precautions
      Comment
      • Optional
        Administrator
        • 06-10-10
        • 61495

        #4
        Whats the story? Did they clean out a bunch of customer wallets or just the company ones?
        .
        Comment
        • raiders72001
          Senior Member
          • 08-10-05
          • 11126

          #5
          ss than a week into the new year and we have our first major cyber-crime: Slovenian Bitcoin exchange Bitstamp was hacked yesterday, and has suspended its service for the time being, reports ZDNet.According to a message on its homepage, Bitstamp noted that one of its operational wallets was compromised on Jan 4, and subsequently suspended its service. Less than 19,000 BTC (worth about $5 million; one BTC is about $270) was stolen.
          The company says that the majority of its funds are held in ‘cold storage’, on offline machines that can’t be accessed over the Internet — and only a fraction of coins used for frequent transactions online have gone missing. It has asked its customers not to make any deposits to previously issued Bitcoin addresses, so as to prevent further losses. Bitstamp has also said that all customers’ “balances held prior to our temporary suspension of services will not be affected and will be honored in full.”
          Bitstamp hasn’t yet revealed any other details about suspects behind the breach or when their service will be up and running again. In the meantime, CEO Nejc Kodrič issued an apology via his Twitter account:
          <iframe id="twitter-widget-0" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" allowtransparency="true" class="twitter-tweet twitter-tweet-rendered" allowfullscreen="" title="Embedded Tweet" height="186" style="box-sizing: border-box; margin: 10px 0px; color: rgb(78, 88, 96); font-family: 'FF Tisa', Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; line-height: 28.7999992370605px; display: block; max-width: 99%; min-width: 220px; padding: 0px; border-radius: 5px; border-color: rgb(238, 238, 238) rgb(221, 221, 221) rgb(187, 187, 187); border-width: 1px; border-style: solid; box-shadow: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.14902) 0px 1px 3px; position: static; visibility: visible; width: 500px;"></iframe>Kodrič also told WIRED that his company is cooperating with law enforcement agencies to uncover the culprit behind the attack, and is “working to transfer a secure backup of the Bitstamp site onto a new safe environment and will be bringing this online in the coming days.”
          The news will certainly deal another blow to Bitcoin’s already tarnished status, after Japanese exchange Mt. Gox lost over half a billion dollars in a hack attack and liquidated itself, and the currency’s value came crashing down from over $1,000 in 2013 to about a quarter of that at present.
          However, that’s not to say that Bitcoin is completely losing ground. Microsoft began accepting the cryptocurrency for digital purchases from Windows, Windows Phone, Xbox Games, Xbox Music, and Xbox Video stores in the US last month. This breach might just serve as a reminder that no digital assets are secured easily in 2015, and that stringent measures must be put in place.
          We’ll keep an eye on developments over at Bitstamp for updates.
          Bitstamp exchange hacked, $5M worth of bitcoin stolen [ZDNet]
          Featured image: Zach Copley

          http://thenextweb.com/insider/2015/0...p-hack-attack/
          Comment
          • wrongturn
            SBR MVP
            • 06-06-06
            • 2228

            #6
            Not individual customer accounts hacking, so the loss should be from company's own wallet, which of course contains all customer's coins. 2FA helps protecting individual account even when password is stolen, but not in this case. This is more likely a security hole from website's software recent update.
            Comment
            • Da_Engineer
              SBR Rookie
              • 01-05-15
              • 16

              #7
              Well by my calculations they made about 10x their loss in gross profit last year, so it shouldn't be a big problem.

              I heard between the branches that it's not really a "hack", it was an insider who had access to the account who ran off with it.

              Regardless, nobody should be trading on Bitstamp. They have the highest fees.
              Comment
              • raiders72001
                Senior Member
                • 08-10-05
                • 11126

                #8
                Originally posted by Da_Engineer
                Well by my calculations they made about 10x their loss in gross profit last year, so it shouldn't be a big problem.

                I heard between the branches that it's not really a "hack", it was an insider who had access to the account who ran off with it.

                Regardless, nobody should be trading on Bitstamp. They have the highest fees.
                It seems that many of the thefts are inside jobs such as Mt. Gox.
                Comment
                • raiders72001
                  Senior Member
                  • 08-10-05
                  • 11126

                  #9
                  It's almost a year since the Bitcoin locker Mt. Gox went offline and took its digital currency with it. Now, a report in Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper claims that 99 percent of the bitcoins that went missing from Mt. Gox falls were a result of "internal system manipulation."
                  http://gizmodo.com/report-mt-gox-bit...job-1677056609
                  Comment
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