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During the last few years, blockchain surveillance has increased a great deal and in the early days around 2013-14, there were only a handful of firms. Now there are more than 20 blockchain analysis companies that monitor addresses, transactions, and making sure addresses are AML/CFT compliant as well.

The Rise of Blockchain Analysis Ventures

In the early days before 2013-14, bitcoiners and cryptocurrency users didn’t really hear about blockchain surveillance. Nowadays, there’s a large slew of companies offering services like analytics, monitoring, and identifying blockchain codebase vulnerabilities. A number of firms have worked with law enforcement in the U.S. and also have contracts with groups like Europol as well. At the time of publication, there are more than 20 different blockchain intelligence businesses that work within the cryptocurrency ecosystem. Some of them are well known firms like Cyphertrace, Chainalysis, and Elliptic. Other platforms are offered by Alethio, Bison Trails, Blockpit, Blockmonitor, Bloxy, Postchain, Scoreshain, Sixgill, Tibco, Credits, Crystal Blockchain, Dune analytics, Madana, Bitrank, and Ocyan are lesser-known operations.

20 Blockchain Surveillance Firms Monitor Cryptos, But Some Apps Show Inaccuracies
There are now over 20 different firms that specialize in blockchain surveillance and some of them work for governments, law enforcement, and financial incumbents.

A few of these startups have dedicated their business models to blockchain surveillance and monitoring a great number of different networks. In October 2019, Chainalysis detailed it was monitoring 21 different tokens that stem from Ethereum. That same month, the firm Ciphertrace revealed it is tracking 700 cryptocurrencies providing “visibility into 87% of the global trading volume.” Many of these companies put out research reports on the data they discover during exchange hack investigations and other types of crypto scams. Elliptic became well known A slew of blockchain surveillance firms published data after the massive Plus Token scam last year.

20 Blockchain Surveillance Firms Monitor Cryptos, But Some Apps Show Inaccuracies
Elliptic’s Big Bang model published six years ago. Elliptic is an older blockchain analysis company that was founded on October 1, 2013, by Adam Joyce, James Smith, and Tom Robinson.

How Accurate Are These Distributed Ledger Monitoring Platforms?

But skeptics often wonder how good these monitoring applications are, and how they deal with coins that have been mixed using the coinjoin process. News.Bitcoin.com recently discovered a platform called Bitrank, a project that allows people to simply copy and paste a BTC or ETH address, in order to check to see if the address follows AML/CFT compliance. Bitrank’s website says it is simple to use and “easy to understand” if people are interested in “Bitcoin address reports for AML/CFT compliance.” The company also says if you run a crypto business you should leverage the platform’s Risk Scoring. However, news.Bitcoin.com tested Bitrank’s platform and found a few discrepancies.

20 Blockchain Surveillance Firms Monitor Cryptos, But Some Apps Show Inaccuracies
The address associated with the Plus Token scam. Blockchain Intelligence Group is older than Elliptic and it offers real-time search and data analytics for companies. It was founded on May 16, 2010, by Anthony Zelen, Lance Morginn, and Shone Anstey according to Crunchbase data. The firm is located in Vancouver, BC, Canada it has seen post-IPO equity status.

For instance, on May 15 our newsdesk pasted a well known legacy BTC address that is allegedly tethered to the Plus Token scam. On February 11, the Plus Token Ponzi scammers moved 12,000 BTC from one wallet to another. The address and some of the other addresses are flagged on a variety of blockchain explorers as well. That address using the Bitrank application gave a Risk Score of 52 or “acceptable.” Other addresses tied to the same address also came up with the same score and it were deemed “acceptable,” according to Bitrank’s service. After that our newsdesk found another discrepancy, we then pasted an address used by a known mining pool. 1KFHE7w8B… had seen a total of 4,968,400 BTC deposited into the address to-date. This particular address Bitrank flagged as “high risk” with a Risk Score of 18.

20 Blockchain Surveillance Firms Monitor Cryptos, But Some Apps Show Inaccuracies
A random address associated with a mining pool that was used today. This address has seen close to 5 million BTC in the wallet.

As Digital Assets Become Popularized, Platforms That Monitor Crypto Transactions Will Likely Increase

It’s likely considered risky because the address has seen close to 5 million BTC since it was created. According to Bitrank, it explains that the addresses Risk Assessment shows it is involved with an exchange, input over 10K, exchange client, darknet deposit, Binance client withdrawal, Bittrex client withdrawal, seen on Paste Bin, seen on a darknet forum, and seen on a darknet listing. The address associated with the 12,000 BTC used by the Plus Token scammers shows no Risk Assessment data from Bitrank. The creators of the platform may know about the discrepancies, and the website says scoring results will be improved soon.

“In the coming weeks, Blockchain Intelligence Group will be implementing some significant enhancements to Bitrank with a number of refinements to both Bitcoin and Ethereum scoring results,” the website details.

20 Blockchain Surveillance Firms Monitor Cryptos, But Some Apps Show Inaccuracies
Chainalysis provides compliance solutions and cryptocurrency investigation services. The firm was founded by Jan Moller, Jonathan Levin, and Michael Gronager on October 1, 2014. Chainalysis is well known for working with law enforcement on various cryptocurrency cases including the Mt Gox breach. In fact, when U.S. officials and blockchain company representatives held a subcommittee hearing on the implications of virtual currencies and illicit financing on June 8, 2016, cofounder Jonathan Levin told the committee Chainalysis knows the destination of the missing 650,000 BTC from Mt Gox. “Chainalysis was the official investigator in the Mt Gox bankruptcy case and the destination of those coins is definitely known,” Levin said.

With more than 20 blockchain analysis firms monitoring blockchains and even reporting to law enforcement, it shows the practice is popular. However, if certain businesses are using blockchain analysis tools regularly, they may find some irregular reporting and inaccurate information. Many of these services offer APIs and platforms for paid clients and interested customers might want to research these platforms for any known issues. Blockchain surveillance has become very lucrative for a number of these companies, as governments across the globe have hired these firms for investigations and intelligence reports. It’s likely that as the crypto economy continues to see relentless growth, these distributed ledger investigators will continue to increase.

What do you think about the fact there are over 20 blockchain surveillance firms in 2020? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

The post 20 Blockchain Surveillance Firms Monitor Crypto Networks, But Some Apps Show Inaccuracies appeared first on Bitcoin News.

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