Bitcoin Thefts Surge, DDoS Hackers Take Millions
Cryptographic
currency's massive rise in value leads to a corresponding increase in
online heists by criminals seeking easy paydays.
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Say you've created a cryptographic currency called bitcoin that
promises users relative anonymity and untraceable transactions. What
could possibly go wrong? The answer, of course, is that these virtues
also appeal to hackers, malware developers, and organized crime rings
who wouldn't think twice about committing virtual bank robberies.
Earlier this month, for example, Bitcoin Internet Payment System
(BIPS), a Denmark-based Bitcoin payment processor, suffered a
denial-of-service (DDoS) attack. Unfortunately for users of the
company's free online wallets for storing bitcoins, the DDoS attack was
merely a smokescreen for a digital heist that quickly drained numerous
wallets, netting the attackers a reported 1,295 bitcoins -- worth nearly
$1 million -- and leaving wallet users with little chance that they'd
ever see their money again. See http://www.informationweek.com/security/attacks-and-breaches/bitcoin-thefts-surge-ddos-hackers-take-millions/d/d-id/1112831
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