Not Your Keys, Not Your Coins: The Demise of Africrypt

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2 years ago

Are you brand new to crypto and not sure where to begin to learn about it? Check out my intro to cryptocurrency and intro to blockchain posts or my cryptocurrency blog to learn more about this fascinating new technology!

Cryptocurrency businesses are thriving and new and experienced investors alike are becoming wealthy at a staggering pace. After all, even in the midst of Bitcoin’s current downturn its price is up over 250% in the past twelve months alone. However, white hat participants are not the only people finding success in cryptocurrency’s uptrend. Cryptocurrency scams and those who perpetrate them are also getting rich. CipherTrace, a blockchain analytics firm specializing in tracking global crypto crimes, estimates that crypto scams worldwide netted nearly $450 million U.S. dollars in just the first four months of 2021. That number may soon grow exponentially though if the latest reports about the disappearance of coins entrusted to a South African crypto investment firm are true.

Africrypt - Too Good to be True?

Africrypt was founded in 2019 by brothers Ameer and Raees Cajee, and quickly grew from a one-man operation run out of a bedroom to one of the most successful trading firms in all of South Africa. The firm promised substantial returns to investors and took in a significant amount of money. While the exact amount of the firm’s assets under management is unknown, estimates range from $100 million U.S. dollars, as sourced from the firm’s own press release, all the way up to $4 billion U.S. dollars if the claims that the firm managed over 69,000 Bitcoin are true.

The trouble for Africrypt began early in April 2021 when Africrypt’s employees lost access to the back-end platforms used to support business operations. Seven days later, Ameer Cajee, the firm’s Chief Operating Officer, notified investors and clients that the business had ceased operating due to a hack that had compromised all systems and the funds held within the firm’s accounts.

Was Africrypt truly hacked or did the Cajee brothers make off with billions in what may be the largest cryptocurrency scam in history? Perhaps only the Cajee brothers themselves know the truth, and, as can be expected, they are denying any involvement in the direct loss of the funds. The Bitcoin were traced leaving the firm’s cryptocurrency wallets and then traveled through a variety of Bitcoin mixers in order to make them more difficult to identify. However, that in and of itself may not be the smoking gun that some hope that it is. The thieves responsible, whether the Cajee brothers or external hackers, would be incentivized to use any means possible to try and conceal the theft.

Crypto Banking: Get More Bitcoin for your Bitcoin

Crypto banking and lending is a flourishing business. Arcane Research estimates that over $24 billion U.S. dollars worth of crypto was used as collateral within the lending market in the fourth quarter of 2020. The true value of cryptocurrency held by crypto banks, custodians, and investment firms is likely significantly larger.

In many ways it makes sense that such a large amount of cryptocurrency would be entrusted to third parties. The traditional banking and financial systems have been around for hundreds of years and people the world over are used to entrusting their assets to third parties for safe keeping. Cryptocurrency, after all, can be notoriously difficult to manage and hang on to.

Many crypto banks and investment firms also sweeten the deal for investors by offering substantial returns to those who store their cryptocurrency on the platforms. As examples, companies like Nexo, Celsius Network, and Crypto.com are offering 5 - 10% or more to retail users who deposit their cryptocurrency into those companies’ wallets. And hedge and quant funds are in many cases able to offer even higher returns to accredited and institutional investors able to participate in those investment vehicles. With all the wealth moving around within Bitcoin and cryptocurrency, is it any wonder that investors were willing to entrust a significant amount of money to Africrypt and the Cajee brothers?

Dude, Where’s My Bitcoin?

Cryptocurrencies are a work of art. They are typically free from control by any individual, government, or company. They offer users sovereignty over their own money. And they are nearly impossible to steal as long as the user protects the private key that grants access to their cryptocurrency wallet.

A private key is a variable in cryptography that is used to decrypt messages or other information meant for a specific recipient. In the context of cryptocurrency, a private key is used to access the wallet, or public address on the blockchain, where your cryptocurrency is recorded. Cryptocurrency cannot be moved without accessing the private key used to secure it. In essence, you can rest assured that your cryptocurrency is safe and secure while you alone have access to your private key and don’t lose it. It’s from that ethos that the commonly used phrase, “not your keys, not your coins”, derives:

While there can be monetary benefits associated with the transfer of your cryptocurrency to a third-party crypto bank as we discussed above, it is not without significant risk. The vast majority of those companies provide zero access to the private keys securing your crypto and you are at their mercy to protect your assets from unauthorized access and to return the assets to you when you want to make a withdrawal. For better or for worse, cryptocurrency and cryptocurrency companies are largely unregulated. If the company holding your cryptocurrency gets hacked or if one of their employees runs off with your deposits, you may find that you’re completely out of luck when it comes to recouping your losses.

To Be or Not To Be Your Own Bank

The decision to entrust one’s assets only to oneself or to send them to a third party is a highly personal one. If you choose to entrust your cryptocurrency to a third party, spend a significant amount of time researching the company, its business model, and the safeguards it has in place to protect assets and reduce risk from both external and internal parties. Ten percent or fifty percent gains are nice, but one hundred percent losses are devastating.

If you decide to custody your own cryptocurrency and “be your own bank”, do your research and find the method that will work best to keep your private key and resident funds away from anyone you don’t trust to access your wealth. Will you use a hardware wallet, software wallet, or paper wallet? Will you store it in your attic, in your backyard, or in a safety deposit box? Will you keep backup copies of your private key or just one? Whatever you do, remember that your private key is only as secure as you make it.

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2 years ago

Comments

The only options to gain interest from crypto are all risky and they almost involved giving your coins to some else. If you hold assets like Bitcoin, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash, and XRP you are better off just holding and waiting for the market to go up to the price you feel comfortable selling.

You could also play trader by swing trading often in the lows and highs but you need some trading skills and you risk buying losing either your initial fiat or initial satoshis. Another way will be to leverage trade but that also has risks as well.

The best way is to buy and hold and wait for your asset to grow in price. If you need to extract $1000 every month you will also need to invest at least $10000 if not more and swing trade to get around that much fiat out. but the best way is always to wait and sit.

I hope people learned their lesson and just keep their coins within their own private keys and that they save those private keys on a secure place too.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Yes, there’s definitely a lot of risk involved with entrusting your keys to someone else. Hopefully, anyone who does that has properly weighed the risks.

$ 0.01
2 years ago

crypto is hard to grasp the concept that is why many are trusting third parties because they think it is just another bank account, they don't get that crypto has limited supply and that no government can print crypto assets, and as such it can't insure your holdings. The government and its institutions can only insure that which can be printed. At least that is my opinion.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

I agree with you. Bitcoin insurance for example would either come down to the company self-insuring with its own BTC hodlings, or purchasing replacement BTC on the open market with fiat or another crypto.

$ 0.01
2 years ago

After all, look at the housing crisis many companies got a bailout, that pretty much means the government printed money to pay those companies debts same with the Covid crisis the government yet again printed money to rescue companies again.

That is why governments fear cryptos because they can't print it, and it separation of money from the state, this means you will have financial freedom in the future, just like you have religious freedom today because church and the state are seperated.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Yea, I’m looking forward to the government’s influence being removed from money and finance as soon as possible.

$ 0.01
2 years ago

Careful with what you wish for because it may actually come to reality. It won't be easy but it is possible after all change always is happening and you will always find those who resist change because they gain to lose something they are living off of.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Yes, the governments of the world won’t leave their influence behind easily.

$ 0.01
2 years ago