Japan Lost $540 Million to Crypto Hacks in First Half of 2018

Published on by Coindesk | Published on

After news broke yesterday of yet another hack of a cryptocurrency exchange in Japan, the country's police authority has released figures revealing the rise in such attacks this year.

According to a report from The Asahi Shimbun Thursday, the National Police Agency has released data for the first six months of 2018 that reveal cyberattacks on crypto wallets and platforms tripled over the same period last year.

The NPA said that, through 158 cyber-breaches, hackers had stolen a massive 60.503 billion yen worth of cryptocurrency.

That figure puts the total for Jan through June 2017 in the shade - a period when $5.9 million in cryptos was stolen in 149 cases of theft.

As per the data, the majority of the losses for H1 2018 were stolen from exchange platforms, around $518 million.

The remainder - just over $22 million - was taken from individuals' crypto wallets.

In what should be a lesson for us all in what not to do with your crypto accounts, the report said that, in over 60 percent of individual wallet breaches, the owners had used the same ID and password to protect their cryptocurrencies as they used for their e-mail and other Internet services.

The majority of the total for hacks at exchanges arose from the Coincheck exchange breach in January - possibly the worst hack ever - one that saw nearly $517 million stolen, according to the report's figures.

In more detail provided by the NPA, NEM was the cryptocurrency most targeted by hackers, with $517 million taken in 36 breaches - with the vast majority having been stolen in the Coincheck hack.

Further, XRP to the value of $13.5 million was taken in 42 instances, and bitcoin worth $7.66 million was also stolen in 94 attacks.

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