Cyber attack on bitcoin a big warning to currency's users

A massive cyber
attack from unknown sources that has been spamming bitcoin exchanges is
highlighting some of the dangers people can encounter when they exchange
cash for digital currencies like the bitcoin, experts said on
Wednesday.
The attack, which is
technically known as a distributed denial of service attack, involved
thousands of phantom transactions, forcing at least three of the online
platforms that store bitcoins and trade them for traditional currencies
to halt withdrawals of bitcoins until they can determine which
transactions were real.
It showed
that bitcoin, which exists solely in cyberspace and operates on a
software code written by an unknown programmer or group of programmers,
is as vulnerable to such an assault as any other Internet-based
business. It exposes the higher risks involved in owning and trading the
instrument compared with the dollar and other traditional currencies.
Bitcoins slumped in value as a result of the disruptions.
"Bitcoin
is still an experimental protocol in its infancy," said Micky Malka, a
venture capitalist who is on the board of Bitcoin's trade group, the
Bitcoin Foundation.
"It will grow and mature over time," he added. "No one should be investing an amount they cannot afford to lose."
This
week's attack was not the first, said Andreas Antonopoulos, chief
security officer for blockchain.info, a website that tracks bitcoin
activity and provides online storage services for bitcoin users.
Antonopoulos
is also a member of a group of core bitcoin programmers and is part of
an emergency response team of programmers who have been working to fix
the flaws in the code governing some bitcoin transactions that the
attackers were exploiting. He said that work that should be completed by
the middle of next week, echoing an estimate provided by a spokeswoman
for the Bitcoin Foundation who said its core developers were all
participating in the effort to fix the code.
Bitcoin
is a decentralized digital system of value transfers that is not
governed by any central bank, company or government. No assets back the
bitcoin, whose value has fluctuated widely as its visibility has
increased. Last September, a bitcoin was worth around $150. By late
December the value was near the $1,000 mark.
Regulators
around the world are struggling how to categorize the bitcoin. Some
want to call it an asset class, others a commodity. Bitcoin users call
it a currency and many advocate for its mass adoption, claiming it can
help solve problems created by expensive and time-consuming bank
transactions.
Early adopters also
liked the anonymity bitcoin has offered, since it can be transferred
between users without any exchange of personal identification
information. However, moves by various authorities to pursue bitcoin
users who they say have laundered money using the currency and attempts
to regulate bitcoin exchanges could soon lower the level of anonymity in
transactions.
On Tuesday,
Slovenia-based Bitstamp became the second major bitcoin exchange to halt
customer withdrawals in the past several days, citing "inconsistent
results" and blaming a denial-of-service attack.
That
was a day after Mt. Gox, based in Tokyo and the best-known digital
marketplace operator, said a halt on withdrawals would continue
indefinitely. Traders reacted to the halt by sending the bitcoin value
to its lowest level in nearly two months.
A Bulgaria-based bitcoin exchange also had to halt withdrawals, Antonopoulos said.
The
price of bitcoins, which have gained wider acceptance in recent months,
dropped in the wake of the attacks from around $850 late last month. On
Wednesday, they were quoted down nearly 2 percent for the day at $656
per coin on the bitcoin tracking website CoinDesk.
"Anyone
who plays in this space, you better have a plan for when an attack
happens because it's going to be a when, not an if," said Brian Krebs, a
Washington-based cyber security expert who runs the blog
KrebsOnSecurity.com.
The lesson
for investors was that the bitcoin wasn't as liquid as initially
advertised, said Jason Scharfman, a financial due diligence expert and
managing partner at consulting firm Corgentum.
"These
types of attacks, they're effectively freezing some of the accounts
because the exchanges don't want to pay out to the wrong person," he
said. "If something's frozen or there's a question about me being able
to redeem my bitcoins, the value of them drops."
"Does this spook financial investors?" he added. "The answer is yes."
Scharfman
said one way to mitigate the risks of such attacks would be to spread
holdings of bitcoins out among several different online storage
facilities. That way if one were attacked the other might still have a
chance at being safe.
Scharfman said the more regulatory scrutiny that bitcoin exchanges received, the safer they were likely to be.
"Regulation
will sort of normalize which exchanges are the most secure. They'll
mandate security measures and smaller exchanges just won't be able to
afford it," he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment