Categories: BitcoinFraud

Why Criminals Shouldn’t Use Bitcoin for Illegal Activities

Ever since its birth in 2008, bitcoin has been involved in various hacking attacks, data breaches and illegal activities. From 2014 to 2015, the number of hacking groups and criminals using bitcoin to demand ransoms increased to a point in which law enforcement agencies had to step in to regulate fraudulent transactions.

Because of the growing use of bitcoin in illicit transactions, the mainstream media has always portrayed bitcoin negatively to the general population, leading them to believe that bitcoin is anonymous. However, bitcoin by nature is definitely not anonymous. In fact, with intelligent blockchain analysis and transaction verification tools, anyone can easily track down bitcoin transactions to its origin, using methods such as clusterization. Clusterization is utilized by the majority of blockchain analysis platforms such as Elliptic, Chainalysis and Coinalytics to obtain different sets of data that are used to track down transactions. Some of the data sets include the history of incoming funds, transfer of funds between two addresses and a set of addresses used by the same entity.

Before understanding the concept behind clusterization, it is important to consider that bitcoin is a distributed ledger of transactions that are publicly displayed for users to observe. Thus, transactions and wallet addresses are left to be viewed openly by the community. However, one major issue in tracking down transactions on a public ledger like bitcoin has always been the size. The number of transactions that are processed by the Bitcoin network is too large to track down with conventional technologies.

Related Post

Clusterization enables anyone to monitor the inputs of a transaction and track down some transactions that belong to the same wallet. As Moe Adam of BitAccess explains, clusters can be viewed as historical data points to form relationships of transactions and wallet addresses. With services from startups like Elliptic and Coinalytics, entities, especially government agencies, can easily obtain the necessary data to find the origin of a certain transaction and the wallet used to facilitate it.

However, Adam states that only businesses and law enforcement agencies are given access to such services and the bitcoin community is excluded from using clusterization to trace transactions. Although making bitcoin a more transparent currency could be beneficial for governments, it could be a negative factor for user privacy.

Image Source

Joseph Young

Joseph Young is a finance and tech journalist based in Hong Kong. He has worked with leading media and news agencies in the technology and finance industries, offering exclusive content, interviews, insights and analysis of cryptocurrencies, innovative and futuristic technologies.

Share
Published by
Joseph Young

Recent Posts

Bitwise Launches Its First Tokenized Fund With $259M in Assets and 4% Annual Yield

Bitwise Asset Management has just made its first move into tokenized funds, and it comes…

10 hours ago

Binance Launches US Stocks and ETFs Trading for Non-US Users With Zero Commission

Binance just made a move that blurs the line between crypto exchange and traditional brokerage…

11 hours ago

NEAR Protocol Ships Confidential Payments, Crosses $19B in Intents Volume, and Partners With Bermuda Government

NEAR Protocol has had a month that most blockchain projects would stretch across an entire…

1 day ago

Chainlink Records 7 New Integrations Across 6 Services and 4 Chains

Something is becoming increasingly clear about Chainlink, the integrations are not slowing down. The protocol…

1 day ago

Circle Freezes $12.6 Million in Zama’s Confidential USDC Contract on Ethereum

Blockchain investigator ZachXBT has flagged a major stablecoin freeze that is sending shockwaves through the…

2 days ago

Exponent Finance Launches V2 To Expand Institutional Yield Markets On Solana

From a primarily interest rate swap niche product, Exponent has developed into an onchain capital…

3 days ago