Former Coinbase agent arrested in India over data breach

A former customer service agent at Coinbase has been arrested in India in connection with a major security breach. The incident, disclosed in May, involved hackers bribing support staff to access sensitive customer data and demanding a $20 million ransom. Coinbase estimates remediation costs could reach $400 million.

The arrest marks an international development in the fallout from one of the cryptocurrency industry's most significant security incidents. Coinbase, the largest U.S.-based crypto exchange headquartered in San Francisco, revealed in May that attackers had bribed contractors or employees outside the United States to steal customer information. The hackers subsequently attempted to extort the company for $20 million, an episode that underscores vulnerabilities in outsourced customer support operations.

Coinbase Chief Executive Officer Brian Armstrong announced the arrest, which a company spokesperson confirmed stemmed from cooperation with U.S. law enforcement, including the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office. This breach has broader implications, linking to fraud schemes such as impersonation attacks on U.S. customers. In a related prosecution, authorities charged a Brooklyn man with operating a "long-running impersonation scheme targeting Coinbase customers," illustrating how stolen data enables ongoing criminal activity.

The event highlights persistent challenges for crypto platforms, where technical defenses are robust but human elements, especially in overseas support channels, remain exploitable. Despite heavy investments in security, such insider threats bypass advanced protections.

Market reaction was measured, with Coinbase shares declining 1.2% to $236.79 on Friday, contributing to a year-to-date drop of about 4.6%. Investors appear cautious about operational risks as the sector seeks mainstream adoption, emphasizing the need for stringent oversight of third-party contractors.

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Police raid and arrests in a €600 million cryptocurrency scam bust across Europe, showing seized assets and suspects.
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Nine arrested in Europe over €600 million crypto scam

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European authorities have arrested nine suspects in a multinational operation targeting a cryptocurrency investment fraud network that stole at least €600 million from victims. The late October sweep involved agencies from several countries and resulted in the seizure of cash, cryptocurrency, and luxury items. Victims were lured through deceptive online tactics but could not recover their funds.

A 23-year-old Brooklyn resident has been charged with defrauding nearly 100 cryptocurrency investors out of about $16 million through an elaborate online phishing operation. Ronald Spektor allegedly posed as a Coinbase representative to trick victims into transferring their assets to wallets he controlled. He was arraigned on a 31-count indictment and pleaded not guilty.

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The Chainalysis 2026 Crypto Crime Report, published January 13, 2026, reveals at least $14 billion stolen in 2025 scams—projected to reach $17 billion—driven by a 1,400% surge in AI-boosted impersonation tactics, amid broader losses including $4 billion from hacks per PeckShield and $154 billion in total illicit volumes linked to nation-state actors.

Spanish authorities have arrested five individuals accused of murdering a man and kidnapping his partner during a cryptocurrency theft in southern Spain. The incident occurred in April, leading to the man's death and the woman's eventual release. Four others face charges in Denmark for related offenses.

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서울경찰청 사이버수사팀이 9일 쿠팡 본사를 압수수색해 대규모 데이터 유출 사건의 증거를 확보했다. 쿠팡은 지난달 말 3,370만 명 고객의 개인정보가 유출됐다고 공지했다. 경찰은 유출 경로와 원인을 규명하기 위해 디지털 증거를 분석 중이다.

Coinbase Global is broadening its platform beyond cryptocurrencies, introducing stock trading, prediction markets and AI-driven tools to position itself as the 'Everything Exchange.' The company aims to become the leading financial app within five years, according to its chief financial officer. These expansions were announced during a system update stream on December 17, 2025.

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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has sued several cryptocurrency companies for allegedly defrauding retail investors out of more than $14 million through fake WhatsApp investment groups and bogus trading platforms. The scheme, which ran from January 2024 to January 2025, used social media ads, deepfake videos, and AI-generated tips to lure victims. Regulators say the operators, based in China, Malaysia, and Hong Kong, misappropriated funds sent to overseas accounts.

 

 

 

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