Cyber Security Blog

Cybersecurity Practices Every Crypto Investor Needs to Remember

Written by Guest Author | 7 April 2026

Crypto security begins long before a trade. It begins with routine, with the sort of steady behaviour that keeps money where it belongs. The FBI said victims of investment fraud involving cryptocurrency reported more than $6.5 billion in losses in 2024, while phishing and spoofing also ranked among the most common internet crimes. Criminals often reach a wallet through a person before they reach it through code. 

A careful investor treats an exchange account like a bank account with extra moving parts. You need strong account security, a clean device, and a habit of checking details twice. CISA says multifactor authentication adds a second step that helps block unauthorised access, and its guidance strongly favours phishing-resistant forms such as security keys or modern passkeys. NIST also says longer passphrases offer far stronger protection than short passwords, and it encourages password manager use because these tools help people create unique credentials and store them safely.

At the time of writing on 30 March 2026, people checking cryptocurrency prices live could see Bitcoin at about $65,857 and Ethereum at about $1,981 before fees and spread. Those figures shift through the day and appear on major exchanges such as Binance, which is exactly why security deserves as much attention as price. A rising chart can draw your eye to the market, while a sound login process and a protected device keep your assets under your control when activity becomes hectic.

Start with the Account Before You Start with the Coin

Password discipline still does a great deal of heavy lifting. NIST says a password should be at least 15 characters long and points people toward passphrases, since a string of ordinary words can stay memorable while remaining hard to guess at scale. That guidance suits crypto particularly well because account recovery can prove painful after a compromise. A password manager helps here, and NIST says these tools increase the chance that people choose stronger passwords, especially when the tool includes a generator. That frees you from the old habit of recycling one tired favourite across several accounts.

The second layer deserves equal care. CISA says phishing-resistant MFA offers the strongest protection against common account takeover methods. Text message codes still help, though SIM swap fraud can weaken that route, so hardware security keys or passkey-based methods usually give you a sturdier result. For a business treasury team or a family office account, this point grows even sharper. The person approving withdrawals and the person managing devices should operate within a clear process, with no loose arrangements and no shared shortcuts that drift from convenience into risk.

Phishing remains a danger. The UK National Cyber Security Centre says you should avoid clicking links in suspicious messages and advises reporting suspected phishing through proper channels. Criminals rely on the foggy recognition that settles over a person when a message looks half familiar. A crypto investor gains a great deal from methodical actions and a second look at domain names, attachments, and support requests.

Protect the Device and the Route Out

Security lives on the device as much as the account. CISA says patches and software updates fix vulnerabilities in applications and operating systems, and an investor who postpones updates for weeks gives criminals a wider opening than necessary. A phone or laptop used for crypto should stay tidy and limited in what gets installed. Free browser extensions of mysterious origin and cracked software can turn a valuable wallet into easy pickings. For organisations handling digital assets, this translates into prompt patching and firm access control around administrative accounts.

Withdrawal hygiene deserves a proper place in the routine because attackers often target the final step. Many investors now whitelist wallet addresses where a platform allows it, approving a small set of destination addresses in advance and keeping the list under close review. You also verify each address on the device you trust rather than through a copied message or a screenshot sent over chat. This habit reduces the chance of sending funds to a scammer after a clipboard hijack, and it suits business controls where dual approval can reduce simple but expensive human error.

Yi He, Binance co-founder, recently said: "Crypto isn't just the future of finance, it's already reshaping the system, one day at a time." That line captures the scale of the change and hints at the responsibility sitting beside it. A system that reaches further into ordinary financial life needs ordinary discipline in abundance, with approved devices and a clear idea of who can move funds and when. The modern part of finance still benefits from old-fashioned order.

Recovery Phrases and Scam Pressure

Recovery phrases and private keys need physical care as well as digital care. A seed phrase stored in a cloud note or an email draft sits in far too many places at once, and a written backup kept offline in a secure location gives you a cleaner result. For larger sums, investors often spread risk through dedicated wallet storage and carefully tested backups. You should know exactly who controls the keys, how recovery works, and how your household or firm would regain access after device loss or staff changes. That is security as administration, which still counts as security.

Richard Teng, Binance CEO, said: "Global adoption often starts with a single domino. Now that crypto is being recognized as a legitimate financial instrument within one of the world's largest retirement systems. The question is no longer what, but when." Wider adoption may well continue, though it also enlarges the target. Keep systems updated, use long unique passphrases and phishing-resistant MFA, protect recovery material offline, and treat every urgent message with the attention it deserves. That set of habits will serve an individual investor and a security officer with equal honesty.