The security defenses of cryptocurrency exchanges are facing unprecedented regulatory pressure. The recent draft regulations proposed by the Korea Financial Services Commission (FSC) have completely changed the penalty logic for security vulnerabilities in exchanges.



The trigger was the November 2025 hack of Upbit, which resulted in assets stolen worth $36 million. Under the old regulatory framework, the maximum fine was only $456,000—relatively limited compared to the stolen amount. But once the FSC's new plan was announced, the game changed entirely.

The new draft proposes a two-tier progressive penalty mechanism: the first tier fines up to 10% of the stolen assets, meaning if the new regulations applied to the Upbit incident, the fine would soar to $36 million, nearly 8 times the old cap. The second tier fines up to 3% of the exchange's annual revenue, with a maximum of $36 million. In other words, regulators are using two calculation methods to ensure that no matter the size of the exchange, the penalties will be "painful."

More strictly, the FSC also requires exchanges' IT security systems to be on par with traditional financial institutions. This not only signifies a substantial increase in technological investment but also means the entire industry's security standards are being forcibly upgraded.

Although these provisions are still under discussion, the direction is clear—using the punitive power of fines to compel exchanges to strengthen security measures. It is foreseeable that the security competition within the crypto industry will escalate to new heights this time.
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TokenomicsTinfoilHatvip
· 20h ago
Damn, fines are increased by 8 times, is this going to bankrupt the trading income? --- South Korea is really tough, directly punishing to the extreme... But on the other hand, security is indeed something that should be taken seriously. --- Here we go again, regulatory authorities always like to be armchair quarterbacks after the fact. Why not prevent it in advance? --- $36 million cap? I just want to know which exchange can withstand that. --- Aligning security standards with traditional finance... the costs are exploding. --- It reminds me of the 2022 wave of collapses. The pressure is indeed high now. --- Fining until it hurts—does this work? The key still depends on how the exchange spends this money. --- Basically, the government wants to have a say, and the crypto industry can't avoid this hurdle.
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CoffeeNFTradervip
· 01-09 06:00
$3.6 million fine? Now you better carefully consider your trading gains, but to be honest, security investments should be this aggressive in the first place.
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TokenSleuthvip
· 01-09 06:00
3.6 million USD? Now that's learning a lesson. The previous 450,000 yuan was just a joke.
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OnChainSleuthvip
· 01-09 05:56
South Korea is really tough this time, with fines increased by 8 times and aligning with traditional financial standards... Small transaction earnings can't handle it.
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ContractSurrendervip
· 01-09 05:42
Getting penalized until it hurts, huh? That's the right way. It should have been like this all along.
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