To the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumps

Abstract Pump-and-dump schemes are fraudulent price manipulations through the spread of misinformation and have been around in economic settings since at least the 1700s. With new technologies around cryptocurrency trading, the problem has intensified to a shorter time scale and broader scope. The s...

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Main Authors: Josh Kamps, Bennett Kleinberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-11-01
Series:Crime Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40163-018-0093-5
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spelling doaj-4832ec694f404c1c85674921539976892020-11-25T03:28:33ZengBMCCrime Science2193-76802018-11-017111810.1186/s40163-018-0093-5To the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumpsJosh Kamps0Bennett Kleinberg1Department of Computer Science, VU University AmsterdamDawes Centre for Future Crime, Department of Security and Crime Science, University College LondonAbstract Pump-and-dump schemes are fraudulent price manipulations through the spread of misinformation and have been around in economic settings since at least the 1700s. With new technologies around cryptocurrency trading, the problem has intensified to a shorter time scale and broader scope. The scientific literature on cryptocurrency pump-and-dump schemes is scarce, and government regulation has not yet caught up, leaving cryptocurrencies particularly vulnerable to this type of market manipulation. This paper examines existing information on pump-and-dump schemes from classical economic literature, synthesises this with cryptocurrencies, and proposes criteria that can be used to define a cryptocurrency pump-and-dump. These pump-and-dump patterns exhibit anomalous behaviour; thus, techniques from anomaly detection research are utilised to locate points of anomalous trading activity in order to flag potential pump-and-dump activity. The findings suggest that there are some signals in the trading data that might help detect pump-and-dump schemes, and we demonstrate these in our detection system by examining several real-world cases. Moreover, we found that fraudulent activity clusters on specific cryptocurrency exchanges and coins. The approach, data, and findings of this paper might form a basis for further research into this emerging fraud problem and could ultimately inform crime prevention.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40163-018-0093-5CryptocurrenciesFraudPump-and-dumpAnomaly detection
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josh Kamps
Bennett Kleinberg
spellingShingle Josh Kamps
Bennett Kleinberg
To the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumps
Crime Science
Cryptocurrencies
Fraud
Pump-and-dump
Anomaly detection
author_facet Josh Kamps
Bennett Kleinberg
author_sort Josh Kamps
title To the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumps
title_short To the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumps
title_full To the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumps
title_fullStr To the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumps
title_full_unstemmed To the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumps
title_sort to the moon: defining and detecting cryptocurrency pump-and-dumps
publisher BMC
series Crime Science
issn 2193-7680
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract Pump-and-dump schemes are fraudulent price manipulations through the spread of misinformation and have been around in economic settings since at least the 1700s. With new technologies around cryptocurrency trading, the problem has intensified to a shorter time scale and broader scope. The scientific literature on cryptocurrency pump-and-dump schemes is scarce, and government regulation has not yet caught up, leaving cryptocurrencies particularly vulnerable to this type of market manipulation. This paper examines existing information on pump-and-dump schemes from classical economic literature, synthesises this with cryptocurrencies, and proposes criteria that can be used to define a cryptocurrency pump-and-dump. These pump-and-dump patterns exhibit anomalous behaviour; thus, techniques from anomaly detection research are utilised to locate points of anomalous trading activity in order to flag potential pump-and-dump activity. The findings suggest that there are some signals in the trading data that might help detect pump-and-dump schemes, and we demonstrate these in our detection system by examining several real-world cases. Moreover, we found that fraudulent activity clusters on specific cryptocurrency exchanges and coins. The approach, data, and findings of this paper might form a basis for further research into this emerging fraud problem and could ultimately inform crime prevention.
topic Cryptocurrencies
Fraud
Pump-and-dump
Anomaly detection
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40163-018-0093-5
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