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KuCoin yearly trading volume exceeds $1 trillion

KuCoin has reported its cumulative trading volume exceeded $1 trillion (Spot & Futures trading), and the average daily trading volume reached $3bn.

U.S. Sanctions 4 Ukrainians for Working with Russia to Destabilize Ukraine

The U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday announced sanctions against four current and former Ukrainian government officials for engaging in "Russian government-directed influence activities" in the country, including gathering sensitive information about its critical infrastructure. The agency said the four individuals were involved in different roles as part of a concerted influence campaign to

El Salvador to give crypto loans to local entrepreneurs

The government of El Salvador has announced it wants to give approximately $10m in crypto loans to small and medium-sized companies (SMEs).

Does the IMF have beef with Bitcoin? Jack Mallers gives his take

Strike CEO, Jack Mallers gave a presentation to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) regarding the Bitcoin Lightning Network and its potential to open up cross-border payments.

The post Does the IMF have beef with Bitcoin? Jack Mallers gives his take appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Top Rated IDO Launchpads for Crypto startups To Consider listing their business

With the emergence of cryptocurrency and its massive return on investment, people show a keen interest in crypto projects. Investors, as…

Initial Farming Strategy — Phase 1 — Protect the Bag.

This medium will outline the first phase of our Farming strategy.

Security Tokens: What They Are and How to Invest (in 2022)

In simple language, a security token is a blockchain-based "share" of an underlying asset, such as a company, real estate, or gold.

The post Security Tokens: What They Are and How to Invest (in 2022) appeared first on Bitcoin Market Journal.

ASIC Selects 5 Regtech Firms to Solve Corporate Disclosure Challenges

The Australian financial market regulator, ASIC, has selected five regulatory technology (regtech) companies to the Business Research and Innovation Initiative (BRII) to find a solution to the chal...

2FA Compromise Led to $34M Crypto.com Hack

2FA Compromise Led to $34M Crypto.com Hack

In a statement on its website today, Crypto.com revealed fresh details concerning a recent hack on its platform, stating that 483 of its customers were affected and that unauthorized withdrawals of over $15 million in ETH, $19 million in BTC, and $66,200 in ‘other currencies’ occurred. The total losses, which amount to more than $34 million at today’s cryptocurrency prices, are more than analysts had projected before Crypto.com’s announcement. The company’s post-mortem came just one day after CEO Kris Marszalek admitted the breach in a Bloomberg TV interview. After many Crypto.com users claimed their funds had been stolen, he confirmed the breach, which had previously been received with cryptic responses from the corporation, referring only to an ‘event.’ During the interview, Marszalek did not reveal how the hack occurred, but he did disclose that Crypto.com has refunded all affected accounts. According to today’s announcement, Crypto.com discovered the suspicious activity on Monday, when ‘transactions were being approved without the user entering the 2FA authentication control.’ To investigate the problem, the site temporarily halted all withdrawals for 14 hours. The attacker was able to approve transactions without triggering 2FA, which is required for all users, according to Crypto.com. Customers were asked to enter into the platform and set up their 2FA tokens again after the company ‘revoked all client 2FA tokens and added additional security hardening measures,’ according to the company. Users will be warned and have ‘enough time to react and respond’ by contacting the Crypto.com staff if the withdrawal appears to be unlawful. The extra precautions include a mandatory 24-hour delay between the registration of a new withdrawal address and the first withdrawal. Following the incident, the company undertook an internal investigation and hired third-party security experts to examine its platform, according to the company. To improve security, it announced plans to move away from two-factor authentication and toward ‘real multi-factor authentication,’ though it did not provide a date. In a statement today, Crypto.com also stated that ‘beginning February 1st, the Worldwide Account Protection Scheme (WAPP) will be introduced in select regions,’ a programme that will recover cash up to $250,000 for “eligible consumers” in the event of an unauthorized withdrawal. Users must enable multi-factor authentication on all transaction types where it is available, set up an anti-phishing code at least 21 days prior to the reported unauthorized transaction, file a police report and provide it to Crypto.com, complete a forensic investigation questionnaire, and not be using a jailbroken device to qualify for the programme, according to the company. While Crypto.com is the world’s fourth-largest cryptocurrency exchange, it has been aggressively expanding its presence in the United States in recent months, with stunts such as viral advertisements starring actor Matt Damon and a $700 million purchase of the naming rights to the Los Angeles Lakers and Clippers Arena. It bills itself as the ‘fastest-growing’ cryptocurrency exchange, and earlier this week announced a $500 million expansion of its venture capital arm to support early-stage crypto businesses. The consequences from this week’s hack, as well as the company’s tardy response, may threaten to halt some of the company’s expansion in the United States.

The post 2FA Compromise Led to $34M Crypto.com Hack appeared first on Cryptoknowmics-Crypto News and Media Platform.

Cisco Issues Patch for Critical RCE Vulnerability in RCM for StarOS Software

Cisco Systems has rolled out fixes for a critical security flaw affecting Redundancy Configuration Manager (RCM) for Cisco StarOS Software that could be weaponized by an unauthenticated, remote attacker to execute arbitrary code and take over vulnerable machines. Tracked as CVE-2022-20649 (CVSS score: 9.0), the vulnerability stems from the fact that the debug mode has been incorrectly enabled

Bybit joins the NFT marketplace party amid market’s renewed boom

The non-fungible token (NFT) sector is going ballistic, and everybody wants a piece of the pie. While far away from its heyday in August last year, when it was carrying out trade of over $1.7 billion each day, the NFT industry is nevertheless booming at the moment. It crossed $500 million in daily sales earlier […]

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