>> https://cointelegraph.com/news/report-1-1-bln-in-crypto-has-been-stolen-this-year > > How does this compare with stolen traditional money? > > Instead of absolute values probably the ratio "stolen/total" is more > interesting.
Total fiat is somewhat easy to calculate due to centralized publications. Total crypto is harder, see mentions of "market cap" on this list. Stolen of both is hard. > Quick web searches doen't return usable info Until it reaches regulatory, political, international levels. ie: there have been a few $tens of Million range bank events in last years, multi accounts, wires, etc. > the banks > and the like probably don't report all incidents because of issues of > "trust". Consumer level shit doesnt reach that per event. Could add up to more than heists above. > IIRC large operator Equifax got owned one of these years, leaking > 100+M mericans. That was data, not money. Though it could be turned into money. Hardware storage? Some idiots don't consider their dongles will also fail, as dumb as expecting banks / exchanges to have / give them their worthless printed money.
