EPISODE · May 16, 2025 · 47 MIN
How the Attack on Coinbase Shows the Dangers of Centralized Exchanges - Ep. 837
from Unchained · host Laura Shin
Coinbase revealed on Thursday that cybercriminals bribed overseas customer support contractors to steal sensitive customer data as part of a $20 million extortion scheme. While no funds or private keys were compromised, customer names, addresses, and ID documents were exposed for nearly 1% of the company’s 8+ million “monthly transacting users,” according to a blog post. The story raises tough questions for the entire industry. Is KYC making users more vulnerable? Can human error ever be fully eliminated? And is crypto’s real security problem… people? Security experts Jameson Lopp, James Wester and Alexander Leishman delve into: What went wrong at Coinbase Why human vulnerabilities are still crypto’s biggest risk Whether KYC makes the problem worse What companies should do next to protect their users Visit our website for breaking news, analysis, op-eds, articles to learn about crypto, and much more: unchainedcrypto.com Thank you to our sponsors! Focal by FalconX Bitkey: Use code UNCHAINED for 20% off Mantle Guests Jameson Lopp, Co-founder and CTO at CASA James Wester, Research Director at Javelin Alexander Leishman, CEO and CTO at River Links Coinbase’s blog post: Protecting Our Customers - Standing Up to Extortionists Coinbase’s SEC filing Commentary: Vance Spencer’s tweet Armani Ferrante’s tweet Timestamps: 🎙️ 0:00 Introduction and ads 🔓 2:30 How hackers tricked Coinbase’s offshore support and why humans remain security’s weakest link 🗂️ 6:49 What customer data was leaked and how hackers use it 🎯 13:14 How attackers prey on targets at weak moments 🌍 20:47 Should Coinbase move customer support back to the U.S.? 🛑 26:35 Why KYC protocols might be making users more vulnerable, not safer 🛡️ 28:48 The best defenses companies can implement to protect users 📰33:49 Weekly News Recap Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What this episode covers
Coinbase revealed on Thursday that cybercriminals bribed overseas customer support contractors to steal sensitive customer data as part of a $20 million extortion scheme. While no funds or private keys were compromised, customer names, addresses, and ID documents were exposed for nearly 1% of the company’s 8+ million “monthly transacting users,” according to a blog post. The story raises tough questions for the entire industry. Is KYC making users more vulnerable? Can human error ever be fully eliminated? And is crypto’s real security problem… people? Security experts Jameson Lopp, James Wester and Alexander Leishman delve into: What went wrong at Coinbase Why human vulnerabilities are still crypto’s biggest risk Whether KYC makes the problem worse What companies should do next to protect their users Visit our website for breaking news, analysis, op-eds, articles to learn about crypto, and much more: unchainedcrypto.com Thank you to our sponsors! Focal by FalconX Bitkey: Use code UNCHAINED for 20% off Mantle Guests Jameson Lopp, Co-founder and CTO at CASA James Wester, Research Director at Javelin Alexander Leishman, CEO and CTO at River Links Coinbase’s blog post: Protecting Our Customers - Standing Up to Extortionists Coinbase’s SEC filing Commentary: Vance Spencer’s tweet Armani Ferrante’s tweet Timestamps: 🎙️ 0:00 Introduction and ads 🔓 2:30 How hackers tricked Coinbase’s offshore support and why humans remain security’s weakest link 🗂️ 6:49 What customer data was leaked and how hackers use it 🎯 13:14 How attackers prey on targets at weak moments 🌍 20:47 Should Coinbase move customer support back to the U.S.? 🛑 26:35 Why KYC protocols might be making users more vulnerable, not safer 🛡️ 28:48 The best defenses companies can implement to protect users 📰33:49 Weekly News Recap Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
NOW PLAYING
How the Attack on Coinbase Shows the Dangers of Centralized Exchanges - Ep. 837
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Jun 30, 2026 ·16m
Jun 29, 2026 ·14m
Jun 26, 2026 ·11m
Jun 25, 2026 ·14m
Jun 24, 2026 ·10m