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Coinbase says cyber criminals stole customer information and demanded ransom

The company’s boss said criminals had bribed some of its customer service agents who live outside the US to hand over personal data on customers.

By contributor Alan Suderman, Associated Press
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The Coinbase logo covers the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York’s Times Square
Criminals bribed some of Coinbase’s customer service agents who live outside the US to hand over personal data on customers, the company said (Richard Drew/AP)

Coinbase, the largest cryptocurrency exchange based in the US, said criminals had improperly obtained personal data on the exchange’s customers for use in crypto-stealing scams and were demanding a 20 million dollar (£15 million) payment not to publicly release the information.

Coinbase chief executive Brian Armstrong said in a social media post that criminals had bribed some of the company’s customer service agents who live outside the US to hand over personal data on customers, such as names, dates of birth and partial social security numbers.

“(The stolen data) allows them to conduct social engineering attacks where they can call our customers impersonating Coinbase customer support and try to trick them into sending their funds to the attackers,” Mr Armstrong said.

Social engineering is a popular hacking strategy, as humans tend to be the weakest link in any network.

Many large companies have suffered hacks and data breaches as a result of such scams in recent years.

Coinbase did not specify how many customers had their data stolen or fell prey to social engineering scams.

But the company did pledge to reimburse any who did.

In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Coinbase estimated that it would have to spend between 180 million dollars (£135.5 million) and 400 million dollars (£301 million) “relating to remediation costs and voluntary customer reimbursements relating to this incident”.

The SEC filing said that the company had, “in previous months”, detected some of its customer service agents “accessing data without business need”.

Those employees had been sacked, and the company said it stepped up its fraud prevention efforts.

Coinbase said it received an email from the attackers on Sunday demanding a ransom of 20 million dollars worth of bitcoin not to publicly release the customer data they had stolen.

Mr Armstrong said the company was refusing to pay the ransom and would instead offer a 20 million dollar bounty for anyone who provided information that led to the attackers’ arrest.

“For these would-be extortionists or anyone seeking to harm Coinbase customers, know that we will prosecute you and bring you to justice,” Mr Armstrong said.

“And know you have my answer.”

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