Cryptocurrency

How do Falling Cryptocurrency Prices Impact Cybercrimes?

Shiva Ganesh

Falling cryptocurrency prices impact cybercrime exchanges and other services in order Falling cryptocurrency prices impact cybercrime exchanges and other services to take cryptocurrencies straight from their legitimate owners.

Falling Cryptocurrency Prices Impact Cybercrimes: Dark web trades are used by cybercriminals since they do not verify user identities. These typically do not store currencies but rather facilitate the exchange of cryptocurrency from one service to another, often at inflated fees. These exchanges function in many respects similar to genuine enterprises.

Cryptocurrency price drops are putting a strain on dark web exchanges. This diminishes incentives for threat actors by lowering income, increasing the cost of acquiring vulnerabilities, and lowering the money required to finance Malware-as-a-Service firms. In other words, declining Cryptocurrency prices have reduced the purchasing power of groups that use cryptocurrency for criminal purposes.

During the early 2022 steep drops, exchanges attempted to transfer their crypto to fiat currencies like the US dollar. However, the value after conversion was insufficient to sustain the business.

Why Can't We Draw a Straight Line from the Crypto Crash to Crime Reduction?

It's simple to deduce that the reduction in scam revenue was directly driven by the downturn in the value of cryptocurrencies. the reduction was not completely related to the drop in Bitcoin. Potential victims and police officers have both had remarkable accomplishments in combating similar schemes. To put it another way, the overall defense against some of these crimes has improved, and praise is warranted.

Another factor to consider is that overall annual scam earnings are typically decided by a small number of really huge frauds. One large hoax might completely destabilize these figures and reverse the trend. Furthermore, ransomware gangs are unlikely to care if the value of cryptocurrencies is low. They often demand ransom payments in the form of whatever number of cryptocurrencies are equal at the time of demand. While there may be a disincentive to strike while cryptocurrency is rapidly declining, that disincentive is removed once it reaches the bottom. Volatility in one direction (down) momentarily disincentivizes ransomware. Unfortunately, ransomware is not going away. Most significantly, it would be a fallacy to expect that bitcoin prices will remain low or that reductions in crime using cryptocurrencies will remain low. Experts are unanimous in their belief that similar crimes will resurface.

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