Cryptocurrency owners often encounter “dirty” coins. What are these assets, and why are they becoming easier to track?
Anyone who doesnβt monitor so-called “dirty” cryptocurrencies can inadvertently receive these marked assets in their wallet. Many large platforms have blocked such wallets, making it difficult to prove innocence.
Analytical systems specialists can update data on cryptocurrency addresses to link funds with illegal activity, even if a significant amount of time has passed since they were received.
Centralized Exchanges (CEX) and Their Role
Large centralized exchanges (CEX) are among the most law-abiding players in the market. They typically comply with the recommendations of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an intergovernmental organization aimed at combating money laundering, terrorist financing, and other threats. They use sophisticated analytical tools to check the purity of cryptocurrency at the entry stage, making it unlikely that βdirtyβ assets will be received on such platforms.
However, the risk arises if the exchange is subject to sanctions, marking all associated funds as sanctioned.
Decentralized Exchanges (DEX) and Their Risks
In contrast, decentralized services (DEX) can operate without licenses, in a gray area, and do not adhere to anti-money laundering (AML) requirements, which increases the likelihood of receiving βdirtyβ cryptocurrency.
How Can βDirtyβ Coins End Up in a Wallet?
Regulated trading platforms and exchangers closely monitor the circulation of cryptocurrencies associated with criminal activity. They record assets involved in illegal transactions.
Fraudsters use various schemes to hide their actions and βcleanβ the coins, including:
- Crypto mixers
- Splitting transactions into small amounts
- Unregulated platforms
- Gambling
- Prepaid cards
- Crypto ATMs
As a result, βdirtyβ cryptocurrencies can end up in the wallets of even the most law-abiding users. Purchasing such assets on regulated exchanges and exchangers that operate according to KYC/AML requirements is impossible since they cannot be received on their platforms. However, users can easily purchase digital assets on an unregulated platform or a dubious exchange or accept them as payment.
How to Track βDirtyβ Coins
Regulated exchanges carefully monitor the circulation of compromised coins, following regulatorsβ requirements. Since January 2020, the EUβs Fifth Anti-Money Laundering Directive has been in effect, requiring platforms to monitor usersβ crypto transactions, maintain records, share data, and report suspicious transactions to authorities.
Large platforms have special units responsible for monitoring suspicious transactions. Bots, automatic notification systems, and manual checks identify βdirtyβ coins. Exchanges utilize mixers, programs, and services for anonymizing transactions and laundering funds, which can lead to account blocking. Exchanges are not interested in the purpose for which the user used the mixer.
International AML standards donβt prohibit mixers, but exchanges are cautious. They usually do not block accounts where coins have been noticed to have passed through a mixer. Still, such wallets are subject to additional surveillance.
Exchanges mainly use external solutions to optimize AML processes to monitor suspicious transactions. The most popular solutions are Chainalysis, CipherTrace, and Elliptic, used by regulated exchanges, exchangers, and law enforcement agencies.
For example, CipherTrace tracks the bulk of all digital assets. Its system monitors crypto transactions and assigns wallets a risk level on a ten-point scale, depending on whether the funds were used in scam projects, mixers, darknet purchases, hacker attacks, extortion, drug trafficking, and terrorist financing.
All compromised wallets and coins are added to a blacklist, accessible to trading platforms using the CipherTrace solution. After that, the exchange systems only have to block βdirtyβ funds and close accounts found to be violating AML requirements.
Anonymous Cryptocurrencies
Anonymous cryptocurrencies, designed to provide high privacy and anonymity, have implemented technologies primarily created to ensure the anonymity and privacy of transactions without external crypto mixers.
One of the most famous anonymous cryptocurrencies is Monero (XMR). The principle of Monero is that each transferred token is mixed with many other transactions, making it impossible to track who sent Monero to whom.
However, Moneroβs anonymity has often been questioned. Moneroβs anonymity problems were especially noticeable until February 2017, but the developers fixed the code afterward. Thus, all transactions made before this time can be tracked. Even after the code change, some loopholes remain, allowing the tracking of transaction senders.
Moneroβs anonymity was also established relatively recently. In 2024, there were several known cases where the supposedly anonymous cryptocurrency was tracked.
For example, in January, the Finnish National Bureau of Investigation reported tracking XMR associated with hacker Julius KivimΓ€ki. Later in September, a video leak by the analytics company Chainalysis indicated that XMR transactions could be tracked. Chainalysis launched many nodes from different geographic locations and used several Internet providers to capture transaction IP addresses and timestamps. This method potentially reduces Moneroβs privacy and allows tracking the location of wallets that interact with the βmaliciousβ node.
Anonymity: Myth or Illusion?
Despite the initial idea of cryptocurrencies as anonymous money, it is evident that today, this is not entirely true. Over the 16 years of digital moneyβs existence, states, companies, and individuals have adapted to decentralized realities and introduced new surveillance tools.
Complete anonymity will always remain a utopia for fans of decentralization.
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