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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2025-12-29 14:26:41.955
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Former Coinbase support agent arrested for helping hackers. A former Coinbase customer service agent was arrested in India for helping hackers earlier this year steal sensitive customer information from a company database. The arrest occurred in Hyderabad, the capital of India's Telangana state and a major technology center in the country, and it is expected that more individuals will be detained, according to Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong. Coinbase is a major American cryptocurrency exchange and financial services company that enables cryptocurrency trading and provides digital wallet services. It has over 100 million registered users across 100 countries and facilitates quarterly trading volume of more than $235 billion. In May 2025, the company announced that rogue customer support agents had given access to hackers who demanded a $20 million ransom to not publish information stolen from a compromised database. Coinbase later specified that the incident had affected about 69,500 customers, exposing their names, dates of birth, the last four digits of their Social Security numbers (SSNs), physical addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses. For some customers, the stolen information also included scanned documents relating to "know your customer" (KYC) processes. In June, Coinbase provided an update on the incident, stating that the breach had occurred through TaskUs, a customer support outsourcing firm based in India, whose employees were bribed by hackers to gain access to the systems. In a comment to BleepingComputer, TaskUs said that the incident involved only two individuals and that they shut down the entire department of 226 employees. News of a customer support agent being arrested follows shortly after charges against a Brooklyn-based scammer, Ronald Spektor, 23, who was accused of impersonating Coinbase to steal funds from unsuspecting customers. Victims were told that their accounts had been hacked and that they needed to move their digital assets to a “safe” wallet to protect them. In reality, they transferred their money to Spektor’s wallet. Through this scheme, Spektor made $16 million from 100 victims, and only $605,000 has been recovered. Break down IAM silos like Bitpanda, KnowBe4, and PathAI Broken IAM isn't just an IT problem - the impact ripples across your whole business. This practical guide covers why traditional IAM practices fail to keep up with modern demands, examples of what "good" IAM looks like, and a simple checklist for building a scalable strategy.
Daily Brief Summary
A former Coinbase customer service agent in India was arrested for aiding hackers in stealing sensitive customer data from the company's database.
The breach affected approximately 69,500 Coinbase customers, compromising personal details such as names, birthdates, partial SSNs, and KYC documents.
Hackers demanded a $20 million ransom to prevent the publication of the stolen data, intensifying the financial and reputational risks for Coinbase.
The incident was traced back to TaskUs, an outsourced customer support firm, where employees were bribed to grant unauthorized access to Coinbase systems.
In response, TaskUs shut down the implicated department, affecting 226 employees, to contain the breach and prevent further unauthorized access.
This arrest follows another scam involving a Brooklyn-based individual who defrauded Coinbase customers out of $16 million by impersonating the company.
The breach underscores the critical need for robust internal controls and vigilant monitoring of third-party service providers to safeguard customer data.