Surface Web/Deep Web/Dark Web

Similar documents
Computer Security. 13. Blockchain & Bitcoin. Paul Krzyzanowski. Rutgers University. Spring 2018

L3. Blockchains and Cryptocurrencies

arxiv: v1 [q-fin.gn] 6 Dec 2016

Bitcoin, Blockchain Technology, Block Chain Ecosystem : What You Need to Know?

an introduction to Blockchain Technology

The Blockchain Trevor Hyde

Bitcoin Currency & Blockchain Technology

Bitcoins and Blockchains

In the future, many kinds of cryptocurrencies will be born, and service competition will increase.

Accounting for crypto assets mining and validation issues

Cryptocurrency and Blockchain Technology

A.J. Bahou, LLM, MSECE Bahou Miller PLLC

Blockchain Technology: Concepts. Whitepaper 1

November 2018 Abstract

$110100$010. Crypto Currencies. Good or Evil? 10$ $100010

Introduction to Blockchain Technology

Bitcoin. Based on Bitcoin Tutorial presentation by Joseph Bonneau, Princeton University. Bonneau slides marked JB

Bitcoin. CS 161: Computer Security Prof. Raluca Ada Popa. April 11, 2019

Cryptocurrencies (Session I) Computer Science and Law

Bitcoin. CS 161: Computer Security Prof. Raluca Ada Poipa. April 24, 2018

The Blockchain Identity

Blockchain made Simple

Will Bitcoin and the Block Chain change the way we Live and Work? Martyn Thomas CBE FREng Livery Company Professor of Information Technology

Blockchain in Healthcare

Blockchain 2.0: Smart Contracts

EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT DIGITAL LEDGER TECHNOLOGY, THE BLOCKCHAIN AND CRYPTOCURRENCIESÓ (Part I June 2018)

From Cash to Blockchain and Bitcoin: Payments of the Past, Present and Future

Coin ing the Tax Bit By: Asmita Bedekar, MST Student

INTRODUCTION TO THE BLOCKCHAIN ERRIN ICT Working Group Meeting on Blockchain June 13, Javier Prieto IoT Digital Innovation Hub

BITCOINS and CRYPTOCURRENCIES How It Works. Principal Consultant CISA, CISSP

Table of contents. 2

Decrypting Blockchain Technology: Basic Concepts & Legal Issues

White Paper. Bizanc Blockchain

How Blockchain Technology Changes Marketing

BitShares is. a decentralized network. All About BitShares in Infographics

The Blockchain Identity

Technical Line. A holder s accounting for cryptocurrencies. What you need to know. Overview

Blockchain Technology in Banking and Financial Services

IS BLOCKCHAIN THE FUTURE OF REAL ESTATE? DENITZA TYUFEKCHIEVA

Bitcoin and why it will change the world

Crypto-Philanthropy: Virtual Currency and the Future of Charitable Giving

Introduction to Blockchains. John Kelsey, NIST

Blockchain, data protection, and the GDPR

Blockchain Demystified

CONTENTS DISCLAIMER... 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY... 4 INTRO... 4 ICECHAIN... 5 ICE CHAIN TECH... 5 ICE CHAIN POSITIONING... 6 SHARDING... 7 SCALABILITY...

Building Blockchain Solutions

Transferring Data through an Ethereum Blockchain using Transactions

International Journal of Computer Engineering and Applications, Volume XII, Special Issue, April- ICITDA 18,

What is it? How to get it? And what to do with it? Matt L. Wahrhaftig CFRE Vice President for College Advancement

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

A block chain based decentralized exchange

Understanding Blockchain & its implications for financial professionals

Journal of Multistate Taxation and Incentives (Thomson Reuters/Tax & Accounting) Volume 28, Number 4, July 2018

BLOCKCHAIN EVOLUTION. The shifting perception of blockchain and the potential impact on businesses, governments and the investment landscape.

Blockchain explained. by Jerome Kehrli

Blockchain. Deepak Agarwal ICMA Conference Presenter

LinkedIn /in/petkanic/

New Kids on the Blockchain: RIM Blockchain Applications Today & Tomorrow

Investing in the Blockchain Ecosystem

chainfrog WHAT ARE SMART CONTRACTS?

Auditing in the Crypto-Asset Sector

Blockchain-based Traceability in Agri-Food Supply Chain Management: A practical Implementation

Lecture 23 Cryptocurrency. Stephen Checkoway University of Illinois at Chicago CS 487 Fall 2017 Slides from Miller s ECE 422

Blockchain / Distributed Ledger Technology

Campbell R. Harvey. Duke University and NBER

Blockchain and Bitcoin: Impact on Insurance Industry

An introduction. Dr Ken Boness

Metro: A peer-to-peer cross-chain digital asset exchange

BLOCKCHAIN DIGITAL REVOLUTION PROSPECTS AND CHALLENGES Fadele Adeolu (CYBERSECURITY CENTRAL BANK OF NIGERIA)

Proof of work and Proof of stake explanation

Will Blockchain Change the Audit? Zhiyong Li. Jianghan University, Wuhan, China. Introduction. The Blockchain Technology

Table of Contents Introduction. 1 What is Bittrado?... 2 Vision. 3 Mission. 4 ICO.. 7 How to start with Bittrado?... 6 How will Bittrado work?...

Blockchain and the possible impact on testing. New technology needs new testing?

Blockchains and the future of finance

Blockchain Technology JAMES C. CONDOS

The Blockchain Technology

Private Wealth Management. Understanding Blockchain as a Potential Disruptor

Level 2, HTLC, SegWit

AlloyCoin: A Crypto-Currency with a Guaranteed Minimum Value

IOV: a Blockchain Communication System

CSCI 1800 Cybersecurity and International Relations. Bitcoins and Blockchains John E. Savage

BLOCKCHAINS MINING NUMBERS NOT GOLD

The Blockchain Identity

Understanding Cryptocurrency (updated May 2018) Ari Paul CIO, Managing Partner BlockTower Capital

Block chain Technology:Concept of Digital Economics

primechain building blockchains for a better world

All Rights Reserved 2017 TCG

BLOCKCHAIN: SOCIAL INNOVATION IN FINANCE & ACCOUNTING

WIZBL WHITE PAPER 5th Generation of Blockchain Technology. v 0.8 content subject to change 2018 WIZBL. All rights reserved.

Bitcoin (BTC) C$4,943 (US$3,745) November 26, 3:15 pm

Copyright Scottsdale Institute All Rights Reserved.

whitepaper Abstract Introduction Features Special Functionality Roles in DiQi network Application / Use cases Conclusion

DeMarche Putting Research To Work Page 1

Blockchain: Where are We and Where are We Heading?

FINANCIAL EXECUTIVES INTERNATIONAL CRYPTOCURRENCIES

Blockchain and Risk ISACA Northern UK, April 20 th, Mike Small CEng, FBCS, CITP Senior Analyst Kuppinger Cole

Whitepaper First Issue: September 17, 2017 Last Revision Date: February 22, 2018

Healthcare, Blockchain and Smart Contracts: Emerging Issues for Healthcare Counsel

Mining Market Overview

Blockchain: from electronic cash to redefining trust

Transcription:

Cryptocurrency

Surface Web/Deep Web/Dark Web

How to Get Data?

Where Hacking, Cyber Fraud, and Money Laundering Intersect

How to Pay? Digital Currency

What is Bitcoin? https://youtu.be/aemv9ukpazg

Bitcoin Price Bitcoin Price Jan 2017 ~$1000, July 2017 = $2460, Jan 2018 =$13412

Where do I get Bitcoins? Bitcoins can be acquired through mining, purchasing on Exchanges, ATMs, and by purchase directly from sellers.

Bitcoin Addresses A Bitcoin address is an identifier of 26-35 alphanumeric characters beginning with the number 1 or 3, that represents a possible destination for a bitcoin payment.

Bitcoin Wallet A Wallet is a Collection of security Keys and Addresses. Address is a public key, Wallet holds the private keys Hot Wallet is a wallet that is stored on a computer connected to the internet. Cold Wallet is a wallet that is not connected to the internet. Hardware Wallet is a wallet that can be removed and connected to a computer to store bitcoins. Paper Wallet is a printout of the private keys and addresses of a wallet (not internet connected).

Who invented Bitcoin? Bitcoin was invented in 2009 with the publication of a paper titled Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System written under the Alias of Satoshi Nakamoto. Bitcoin was a combination of several prior digital currencies such as b-money and HashCash Main difference is that Bitcoin uses a distributed computation system called proof of work to conduct a global election approximately every 10 minutes to allow the network to arrive at a consensus about the state of transactions.

Bitcoin in 5 minutes https://youtu.be/l9jojk30eqs

Issues with Virtual Currency There were many different virtual currencies before bitcoin, but they all had these primary issues. 1. Can I trust the money is authentic and not counterfeit? 2. Can I be sure that no one else can claim the money belongs to them and not me?

Encryption and Prime Numbers In order to understand how Bitcoin and other Cryptocurrencies work it is important to have some understanding of Encryption and how it works. If you don t understand how encryption works that s okay, but you at least need to have faith in the fact that it is mathematically infeasible to hack or break encryption without inside information or private keys. If you don t believe in the above, here is my Bitcoin wallet. Try to hack it. 1JSm6X8zZYsC1iWp1oh5CxjMREaeAZBUed

Public Key/Private Key Public Keys and Private Keys work together to ensure security. Public Key is like giving a lock to anyone who wants it, the lock can be used to secure anything, the corresponding private key is needed to open the lock

Key Components of Bitcoin Decentralized peer-to-peer network (Bitcoin Protocol no central oversight) A public transaction ledger (blockchain) A decentralized mathematical and deterministic currency issuance (distributed mining) A decentralized transaction verification system (Transaction Script)

How Transactions Work A wallet address is given to the sender. Sender enters the amount of currency to send The password is entered Transaction is sent to the network.

Transaction Outputs A transaction is output in the form of a script that creates an encumbrance on the value and can only be redeemed by the introduction of a solution to the script. The output is payable to whoever can present a signature from the key corresponding to the public address. Because only the receiver has the wallet to present the public key, they are the only person who can present a signature to redeem it. The funds are secured using the recievers Public Key (lock) and can only be spent once they are unlocked with the Private Key. Since only the receiver has the private key, once transferred, access to send/spend the funds resides with the receiver.

How Transactions Work The Funds Transfer is distributed to the Bitcoin network.

How Transactions Work Miners on the network collect transactions and put them into blocks.

Confirming Blocks Once the block is confirmed by other miners the block is added to the block chain.

Confirmations As soon as a transaction is sent out it is marked as unconfirmed. Unconfirmed transactions are sent out to the network but have not yet been included in the bitcoin transaction ledger (Blockchain). To be included in the blockchain, the transaction must be picked up by a miner and included in a block of transactions. The transaction is seen by all instantly, but is only trusted when included in a newly mined block.

Adding to the Blockchain Blocks are added by miners who hash the inputs until a specific hash solution is reached. The solution has a specific number of leading 0s depending on the mining difficulty.

Randomness of Mining The SHA-256 algorithm takes an input string and transforms it into a 256 bit length Hash. SHA-256 was developed by NSA and is not hackable based on current technology Hashes are a way to verify authenticity because they produce the same result every time and are unique to each unique file. http://www.xorbin.com/tools/sha256-hash-calculator 2^256 =1.157920 E77 possible outcomes 115,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,0 00,000,000,000,000,000 possible outcomes

Difficulty of Blocks To solve a block, essentially the Mining computer uses the SHA-256 Hashing algorithm on the inputs to obtain a string with a particular number of leading zeros. 000000000000000000dad6d19240284ec2224c62871889f9a3f486b4a 4b7e952 Block 480060

Mining Bitcoins A good way to describe mining is like a giant competitive game of Sudoku that resets everytime someone finds a solution and whos difficulty automatically adjusts so that it takes approximately 10 minutes to solve. The following Sudoku can be verified very quickly, but it takes significantly longer to solve with only a few boxes filled in. Just like the Bitcoin Blockchain hard to solve, easy to verify.

Blockchain.info

Sample Transaction

What does a block look like? https://blockchain.info/block/0000000000000000006d1fba28e2f1fb7 cb31db93b5cd57bc76c696234766871

What does a block look like?

Credit Card vs. Bitcoin Transactions

Money Laundering Concerns Allows for greater anonymity than traditional noncash payment methods Bitcoin does not require or provide identification or verification of participants Does not generate historical records of transactions that are associated to a real world identity No central oversight body to monitor transactions Global reach instantly

Summary Bitcoin is a decentralized peer-to-peer network. There is no central authority, there is no singular point of failure or point for bad actors to attack. Bitcoin uses a public transaction ledger which records all transactions and allows everyone to view the prior transactions. A decentralized mathematical and deterministic currency issuance (distributed mining). New currency is issued methodically based on merit and work completed. A decentralized transaction verification system. Transactions are signed and submitted to the network for approval and verification.

Other Virtual Currencies There are atleast 1441 other different virtual currencies each with their own protocol, and variations. Coinmarketcap.com Litecoin-faster than bitcoin to transact, new block every 2.5 minutes (Silver to bitcoin s Gold) Ethereum-Platform that allows development of other blockchains and virtual currencies (Centralized) Bitcoin Cash- split off of bitcoin, supports more transactions per block, lower fees. Zcash-bitcoin with hidden sender, recipient and amount Ripple-centralized blockchain for businesses, very fast.

Other Virtual Currencies Most of the other currencies operate very similarly to Bitcoin. Centralization can be a difference Amount of Currency issued and issuance rules Block time (speed of blocks) Hashing algorithm

TAXES this is not advice Bitcoin mining income is recorded as income as it is earned and is ordinary income. Previously in 2017 virtual currency may have been eligible for the like kind exchange provision of the tax code section 1031, this allowed exchange of virtual currency for another virtual currency without a recognizing a taxable event. Tax revisions made in 2018 clarify that the like kind exchange treatment is not acceptable with cryptocurrency. Transactions are treated as a taxable events. Income from the purchase and sale of virtual currency is subject to reporting as capital gains. Short term <365 days is treated as ordinary income, long term >365 days is a long term capital gain.

References Mastering Bitcoin, by Andreas Antonopoulos Coindesk.com Coinmarketcap.com Blockchain.info Walletexplorer.com Coinomi Wallet Youtube