Coinbase Offers $20 Million Bounty After Insider-Driven Data Breach
- Coinbase publicly revealed on Thursday that criminals obtained personal customer data through bribed non-U.S. Agents and demanded $20 million in ransom to withhold its release.
- The breach occurred because attackers bribed some Coinbase customer service agents living outside the U.S. To access sensitive information like names and partial social security numbers.
- This stolen data allows attackers to impersonate Coinbase support and conduct social engineering to trick customers into sending cryptocurrency to them.
- Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong stated, "We will prosecute would-be extortionists" and announced a $20 million bounty for information leading to the attackers' arrest.
- Coinbase refuses to pay the ransom and estimates it will spend between $180 million and $400 million on remediation costs and voluntary reimbursements due to the incident.
244 Articles
244 Articles
Coinbase flips $20M extortion demand into bounty for info on attackers
Coinbase responded to a security incident with combative measures Thursday after the company said cybercriminals bribed some of the cryptocurrency exchange’s international support staff to steal data on customers. The unnamed threat group stole personally identifiable information and other sensitive data on less than 1% of Coinbase’s monthly users, the company said in a blog post. The cybercriminals contacted customers under the guise of an empl…
Support Staff Steal Customer Data From the Kryptobörse Coinbase
At the leading US crypto exchange Coinbase, numerous customer data has been stolen. The blackmailers demand 20 million dollars. Head of the company Armstrong turns the tables and spends the same amount on their capture.


Coinbase Said Cyber Crooks Stole Customer Information and Demanded $20 Million Ransom Payment
Coinbase, the largest cryptocurrency exchange based in the U.S., said Thursday that criminals had improperly obtained personal data on the exchange's customers for use in crypto-stealing scams and were demanding a $20 million payment not to publicly release the info.
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