Is Your Crypto Exchange Safe? 4 Red Flags And How To Stay Secure

 | Feb 13, 2018 21:40

As the cryptocurrency universe expands and trading in the burgeoning alt-currency marketplace grows, a variety of inherent risks have developed in tandem. Scam currencies and increasing government regulation have been widely covered. The legitimacy of digital currency exchanges not so much, though high-profile hacks and collapses of currency exchanges often garner headlines—even as these events push digital currency prices lower, at least for the short-term.

Over the brief history of cryptocurrency trading there have been a few incidents that justify investor due diligence regarding the exchange with which they are considering doing business. Perhaps the most high-profile collapse involved Mt.Gox, a Bitcoin exchange based in Tokyo which caused the price of a Bitcoin to fraudulently drop to one cent on the exchange in 2011, after a hacker allegedly used credentials from the compromised computer of the exchange's auditor to illegally transfer a large number of Bitcoins to himself. Though trading on the exchange eventually resumed, in 2014 Mt. Gox was shut down after blaming hackers for additional, major losses.

Less than a year later, in 2015 Bitstamp UK- and Slovenia-based Bitcoin exchange had a similar situation in February 2014, going offline while it investigated a security compromise. After the service disruptions, however, the exchange recovered and remains in business.

In 2017, Slovenia-based crypto-mining marketplace NiceHash, returned to normal .