Coinbase refuses $20m ransom, launches matching bounty on blackmailers

By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/15 23:00:10
0
Share
copy
Coinbase fell victim to extortion, with attackers claiming they had confidential information on its users. Coinbase was targeted in a security exploit aimed at its customer representatives. On Thursday, May 15, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong revealed that the company had received a $20 million ransom email, to which Armstrong made it clear the company has no intention of complying. According to Armstrong, the attackers threatened to release sensitive information about Coinbase customers unless the exchange paid the ransom. Instead of complying, Armstrong responded publicly, declining the payment and vowing to pursue the extortionists. “I want to make you aware of a disturbing email were received recently at Coinbase. It was a ransom not demanding $20 million in Bitcoin in exchange for these attackers not to release some information they obtained on our customers,” said Brian Armstrong of Coinbase, adding that “I want to respond publicly to these attackers by saying no.” Instead of paying the ransom, Armstrong announced that the company would offer the equivalent of $20 million for any information leading to the arrest of the attackers. Coinbase will also strengthen its security protocols across the board. How Coinbase attackers gained customer info According to Coinbase’s internal investigation, the attackers obtained customer data by targeting Coinbase’s overseas customer support representatives. They bribed some of these reps in exchange for sensitive user information. These representatives don’t have access to private keys or passwords. However, the information they had, such as dates of birth and contact information, allowed the attackers to perform social engineering attacks. Specifically, they contacted the users, pretending they were support agents, and tricking them out of their crypto. Armstrong stated that Coinbase would reimburse any customers who lost crypto in this manner. The company is also relocating some of its customer support centers in response, although Armstrong did not disclose which locations would be affected. Source: https://crypto.news/coinbase-refuses-20m-ransom-launches-matching-bounty-on-blackmailers/

You may also like

Morning Report | Prediction market platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket jointly sue Kentucky over 14.25% trading tax; Bridgewater founder discusses decision-making in the AI era: principled thinking should run parallel to AI, human insight remains irre...

Overview of Important Market Events on June 15

What is the connection between Huang Zheng of Pinduoduo and blockchain?

From Pinduoduo's "reverse insurance" to blockchain's smart contracts, this article explains how Huang Zheng's underlying logic uses "certainty" rules to reshape the flow of wealth for ordinary people.

The other side of Musk's trillion-dollar fortune: 85% cannot be sold

SpaceX's IPO is a math problem, and the answer is not on the pricing day, but in the first quarter after the lock-up period ends.

The U.S. government prohibits foreigners from using Fable 5, Anthropic issues a rebuttal

The sudden removal of the two models has caused widespread shock in the tech industry and the AI community.

Citibank releases "2030 Asset Tokenization Market Outlook": 6 major trends may create a $8.2 trillion market

The tokenization of financial assets is moving from pilot projects to large-scale implementation, but this is a gradual evolution rather than a fierce revolution.

The trillion-dollar valuation test: Are the three major super IPOs a celebration for tech stocks or a nightmare for the crypto market?

Tech giants like SpaceX and OpenAI have sparked a $35 trillion super IPO wave. The "suction effect" is not enough to crash the stock and crypto markets, but the test of high valuations is just beginning.

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more
iconiconiconiconiconiconicon
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com