Top

Compliance and Cooperation — A Necessary Formula for Combatting Crypto Crimes

Policy & Regulation·September 13, 2023, 7:50 AM

From common scams like voice phishing to threats of violence, the involvement of cryptocurrencies in crimes against the general public is steadily on the rise both in South Korea and abroad.

Photo by Bermix Studio on Unsplash

According to blockchain data analysis firm Chainalysis, the scale of cryptocurrency-related crimes and hacking on a global scale has decreased by 45.2% and 23.5%, respectively, compared to last year. However, financial losses resulting from smaller ransomware attacks, including phishing scams, are showing an upward trend.

Authorities and industry figures alike are increasingly emphasizing the need for close cooperation to combat this growing issue, as existing regulations and legal frameworks remain insufficient to do so.

Chainalysis and crypto exchange Binance co-hosted a policy summit in Seoul on Tuesday called “Securing the Future of Crypto,” where experts gathered at the Courtyard Marriott hotel to discuss compliance and cooperation between the public and private sectors in fighting crypto crimes.

 

Challenges and complexities in crypto investigations

“The Korean National Police Agency receives dozens of reports of financial losses and urgent requests for account freezes every day, with 80% of them pertaining to Binance,” said Kim Min-jae, an investigator at the National Police Agency’s International Cyber Cooperation Division.

Citing a recent case of a voice phishing scam targeting a woman in her 60s, Kim said that authorities were able to proceed with the investigation within 30 minutes after receiving information from the exchange. However, addressing crimes beyond large cryptocurrency exchanges like Binance, such as those involving decentralized finance (DeFi) systems or foreign exchanges, poses a more difficult challenge due to the lack of proper measures to deal with them.

Lee Soo-pyeong, a cybercrime investigator at the Korean National Police Agency’s Cyber Investigation Division, also noted that although domestic cases are relatively easier to investigate, there have been many cases — such as the appalling Nth Room case that caused an uproar throughout Korea in 2020 — that involved overseas accounts and exchanges.

 

Steps for effective crime control

What measures, then, should authorities and corporations take in order to deal with such issues? Lee stressed the importance of cooperation among international judicial bodies and adherence from businesses to enhance the response to increasingly sophisticated crypto crimes.

Know Your Customer (KYC) standards — the guidelines used in investment and financial services to verify customers’ identities and assess their risk and financial profiles — play an important role in this regard. However, “There are no platforms yet, including major exchanges like Binance, that provide us with personal information through KYC measures when funds are laundered,” Kim explained. He expressed hopes for a system jointly established by relevant entities, including local exchanges, that will enable swift criminal investigation.

Lee also highlighted the importance of compliance from foreign companies, stating, “While it’s possible to request mutual legal assistance in criminal matters from the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol), active cooperation from foreign companies is essential.”

From an international point of view, Jarek Jakubcek, Head of Intelligence and Investigations APAC at Binance, pointed out that upholding international standards and standardized processes is important, given the fact that crypto crimes transcend borders. While some countries excel in compliance and enforcing anti-money laundering (AML) policies, others fall short, leading criminals to exploit these disparities.

Recently, there have been criminals who move their funds through blockchain networks. The development of bridge technology, which facilitates cross-chain asset transfers, has led to laundering techniques becoming more and more sophisticated. However, he assured that tracing funds is still possible, although doing so has become harder than before.

The amalgamation of these circumstances has thereby ushered in the era of Know Your Transaction (KYT). While exchanges have traditionally been obligated to perform Know Your Customer (KYC) procedures to prevent money laundering, they must now go beyond verifying user information and analyze customer transaction data in order to understand where money is coming from and how it flows, Jakubcek said. To achieve this, he argued, they must request information from users and work with on-chain data analysis solution companies like Chainalysis to secure real transaction data. Alec Zebrick, Manager of Investigations in the Asia-Pacific region at Chainalysis, added that leveraging on-chain data allows the verification of most transactions.

In the rapidly evolving crypto landscape where crimes are still a force to deal with, experts agree that reinforcing compliance and cooperation between exchanges and authorities is imperative.

More to Read
View All
Web3 & Enterprise·

Apr 24, 2023

Gemini Opening Engineering Center in India

Gemini Opening Engineering Center in IndiaUS-based crypto exchange Gemini announced on Thursday that it is in the midst of opening an engineering center in India. The company plans to open the center in Gurgaon, making it Gemini’s second largest engineering hub behind its existing base in the United States. Gemini also has offices in the United Kingdom, Singapore and Ireland.©Pexels/Studio Art SmileDeveloping next-gen user experiencesThe objective of the India-based engineering, design and operations team will be to work on the development of core platform fundamentals relative to compliance, security, payments, and data pipelines and warehousing. Furthermore, the unit is being set the goal of building new feature sets relative to the company’s NFT and digital asset marketplaces. What that team develops is intended to be used within Gemini’s overall retail and institutional product and service offering across in excess of seventy countries worldwide.In the statement published to its website, Pravit Tiwana, Gemini’s Global Chief Technology Officer (CTO) and Asia-Pacific (APAC) region Chief Executive Officer (CEO) stated that the firm is actively recruiting software engineers and technical product managers and for other technical roles to staff the Gurgaon facility. Tiwana emphasizes a need for people who are “inspired to learn quickly” relative to DeFi, Web3, NFTs and DAOs.Singapore expansionTiwana himself has been newly appointed to his role and in a separate announcement Gemini founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss welcomed Tiwana on-board. The statement also reveals that in addition to establishing an engineering team presence in India, it also intends to add a business team in India and to expand its business team at its existing Singapore base with the objective of growing its institutional and retail customer base in the APAC region.The Winklevii twins said that they believe that “crypto and Web3 products will continue to have a [sic] strong growth trajectories in APAC. Crypto knows no boundaries, and that is why Gemini is a global company.”Expanding beyond the USIt’s patently obvious to anyone following developments in the crypto space over the course of recent months that the Biden administration in the United States is currently hostile to crypto. The Washington, D.C. government has used various mechanisms of state including the Federal Reserve, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Department of Justice and the Department of the Treasury to instigate a purge against crypto companies, including those who bank crypto companies. That has seen key operators in the US crypto ecosystem looking beyond US borders right now.Earlier this week, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong signaled that the company would act and move overseas if the regulatory environment in the United States didn’t improve. Subsequently, it emerged that Coinbase had established a presence in Bermuda. It’s being speculated that this entity could be used to float an offshore exchange. Similarly, the company is understood to be seeking a crypto license in Abu Dhabi.Gemini looking to develop overseas is likely to be motivated by similar concerns. Crypto companies can see that jurisdictional arbitrage applies and if governments act to stymie such business activity, other global centers such as Singapore, Hong Kong, Abu Dhabi, India and others will seize the opportunity and nurture that business and the innovation at hand.

news
Web3 & Enterprise·

Jun 22, 2023

Wemade Launches NFT-Based DeFi Service to Empower Its Ecosystem

Wemade Launches NFT-Based DeFi Service to Empower Its EcosystemSouth Korean gaming company Wemade today launched NFTFi, a peer-to-peer decentralized financial service based on non-fungible tokens (NFTs), according to an official press release. The service is now accessible on Wemade’s DAO-powered blockchain NFT platform NILE, also known as NFT Is Life Evolution.Photo by Choong Deng Xiang on UnsplashBorrow and lend NFTsInitially, NFTFi will enable users to borrow and lend NFTs, with plans to introduce a swap function in the future. The service will support trading for all NFTs available on the NILE marketplace, including the NEITH NFTs unveiled in March this year.Through NFTFi, borrowers have the ability to secure WEMIX tokens or WEMIX Dollars by using NFTs as collateral. Borrowers can request loans, and lenders can review these requests and assess the conditions under which they are willing to lend their assets.The borrower who presents the most favorable borrowing terms will be selected, and the loan contract will be automatically executed. The NFTs provided as collateral will remain locked until the loan is fully repaid. In the event of failure to repay, ownership of the NFTs will be transferred to the lender.Effective asset managementNFTFi users will have the ability to evaluate the value of an NFT based on various data. Notably, NEITH NFTs offer effective asset management as their holders can claim the amount of WEMIX tokens at any time from the Covenant Date. This token eligibility feature contributes to the stability of NEITH NFTs.NILE expects that NFTFi will enhance the value of NFTs as financial assets and play a role in the sustainable growth of the WEMIX3.0 ecosystem.

news
Policy & Regulation·

Jul 26, 2023

Fair Weather Day for Rain With Abu Dhabi License Approval

Fair Weather Day for Rain With Abu Dhabi License ApprovalRain, the cryptocurrency exchange that serves the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), Turkey, and Pakistan, has scored a significant regulatory win in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). On Tuesday, the Abu Dhabi unit of Rain secured a license to operate as a virtual assets brokerage and custody service within the country.Photo by Agnieszka Kowalczyk on UnsplashCoinbase backingHeadquartered in Bahrain and backed by Coinbase, Rain’s Abu Dhabi Global Market financial free zone entity will now have the authority to offer virtual asset services to institutional and select retail clients in the UAE. This includes the ability to facilitate the buying, selling, and custody of cryptocurrencies.According to Co-Founder Yehia Badawy, the newly acquired license brings additional advantages to Rain. Notably, the exchange will be able to open a bank account in the UAE, simplifying fund management for its clients who can now utilize the local payment network.For Rain, this regulatory approval holds particular significance, as it addresses the hesitancy among local asset managers to engage with crypto firms lacking a domestic license. With this stamp of approval, these managers are expected to feel more at ease collaborating with Rain, thus expanding the potential demand from institutional investors.$500 million valuationRain has been gaining traction since its establishment in 2017 by Badawy and three other co-founders. Kleiner Perkins and Coinbase Ventures, two prominent investors from Silicon Valley, have backed the exchange. Both participated via a Series B funding round in January 2022 that saw Rain raise $110 million. Interestingly, Rain’s leading investor, Coinbase, also expressed an interest in developing a base in Abu Dhabi in recent months.There has been a lot of speculation in recent times with regard to where Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, is headquartered. Although still not certain, many believe that Abu Dhabi provided that base for the company. Meanwhile, US-headquartered cryptocurrency exchange Gemini, is working towards establishing a base in the UAE.Overcoming challenging market conditionsLast year’s Series B fundraise resulted in the company achieving a valuation of $500 million. The funds from that round were earmarked for the expansion of Rain’s operations throughout the region. Later that same year, the company laid off dozens of employees as bear market conditions within the digital assets space began to bite. As market conditions worsened later that year, the firm announced a fresh round of job cuts in September.The UAE has been positioning itself as a crypto-friendly destination, aiming to attract major players in the cryptocurrency industry. By enabling cryptocurrency payments in sectors like real estate and education, the UAE has spurred adoption rates and transaction volumes. Additionally, the country has been actively working on developing virtual asset regulations to accommodate new business opportunities in a highly competitive Gulf region.Rain’s recent licensing achievement signifies a significant milestone for the exchange and contributes to the UAE’s ongoing efforts to establish itself as a leading hub for the cryptocurrency sector.

news
Loading