Coinbase Crypto Exchange Executes Internal Wallet Migration 2025

Coinbase Crypto Exchange Executes Internal Wallet Migration 2025

The crypto exchange said the planned internal migration is a normal, "best practice" in the industry to maintain cybersecurity standards.

Crypto exchange Coinbase initiated a large fund migration on Saturday, moving tokens to new internal wallets in a scheduled, routine security procedure to reduce long-term exposure of keeping funds in the same wallet addresses, which are publicly known.

The migration is not due to any cybersecurity breaches or external threats, according to an announcement from the company. Coinbase said:

This means that large Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), and other token balances will be moving onchain from Coinbase wallets to other internal Coinbase wallets already labeled by blockchain explorers and intelligence platforms.Coinbase warned users that during the migration, scammers may attempt to exploit the situation by impersonating Coinbase representatives and reaching out to customers requesting login information or asking users to shift funds, which the exchange never does

The warning is a reminder that crypto users must remain vigilant against phishing attempts, hacks, scams, and other cybersecurity attacks in an ever-evolving threat landscape.

Related: Coinbase ’doubles down’ on Solana with latest DEX acquisition

Hackers target centralized servers, information systems, and hot crypto wallets, which are connected to the internet, to extract information and value from users.

These centralized repositories containing vast quantities of information or tokens are attractive to threat actors, who often plan these attacks for months and see the large centralized systems as honeypots.

The emergence of artificial intelligence and AI-powered tools also gives hackers an edge in assembling heuristic clues through publicly known information and other metadata that can compromise sensitive information or lead to theft, cybersecurity experts tell Cointelegraph.

Quantum computers also pose a threat to current cryptographic technology, which is not far off in the future, but may have already materialized retroactively, Gianluca Di Bella, a smart-contract and zero-knowledge (ZK) proof researcher, told Cointelegraph.

Source: CoinTelegraph