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97% of Crypto Hacks Were Against DeFi Projects: Report

Summary:
Blockchain analyst firm Chainalysis published a new report focused on the illicit activities occurring on blockchains, noting that DeFi protocols are the most popular target hackers tend to go after and that money laundering in the space has risen in the past two years. DeFi as Hackers’ Primary Target Since the DeFi Boom occurred in the summer of 2020, illicit DeFi transactions have risen steadily. Money laundering and DeFi hacking have been the two major criminal activities on such protocols, Chainalysis’ report shows. In total, .7 billion worth of digital assets were stolen by perpetrators in 2022, with 97% coming from DeFi protocols. The stash mainly came from two alarming thefts: the 0M Ronin bridge breach at the end of March and the 0 million Wormhole attack

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Blockchain analyst firm Chainalysis published a new report focused on the illicit activities occurring on blockchains, noting that DeFi protocols are the most popular target hackers tend to go after and that money laundering in the space has risen in the past two years.

DeFi as Hackers’ Primary Target

Since the DeFi Boom occurred in the summer of 2020, illicit DeFi transactions have risen steadily. Money laundering and DeFi hacking have been the two major criminal activities on such protocols, Chainalysis’ report shows.

In total, $1.7 billion worth of digital assets were stolen by perpetrators in 2022, with 97% coming from DeFi protocols. The stash mainly came from two alarming thefts: the $600M Ronin bridge breach at the end of March and the $320 million Wormhole attack in February. The report outlined that, as of 2022, most stolen funds – over $840M – have gone to hackers with ties to North Korea.

Besides hacking, money laundering conducted via DeFi has also grown consistently over the past years, with DeFi protocols taking in 69% of the crypto-based funds associated with criminal activities.

The report attributed the nature of most such protocols – allowing users to trade one token for another – to the difficulty of tracking the movement of digital assets. Also, the lack of KYC requirements for most DeFi projects has made them more enticing to criminals.

The report used the example of the notorious North Korea-linked Lazarus Group, which laundered $91 million worth of cryptocurrencies last year on several protocols. The group reportedly swapped stolen tokens to ETH and BTC, transferred them to accounts on centralized exchanges, and then cashed out the assets.

NFT Wash Trading

Another notable outtake in the report centered on NFT Wash Trading – a form of market manipulation that artificially inflates an illiquid asset. Wallets controlled by the same entity can trade NFTs in between, giving market participants a wrong perception that the demand for the asset is higher than its actual level.

The report identified an example that has generated over 650,000 wETH in transaction volume through manipulation. It stated that the incidents occurred on the same platform because the marketplace paid out incentive rewards for trading NFTs in the form of the platform’s native token.

Users could earn additional tokens by simply transacting more often in between accounts. Meanwhile, NFT collectors may be deceived to believe that the marketplace has more transaction activity than it does.

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