The collapse of FTX in November 2022 shattered the illusion that size equals safety in cryptocurrency exchanges. With Bitcoin trading at approximately $23,031 and Ethereum at $1,572 in late January 2023, the market is slowly recovering — but the scars remain. For everyday users, the question has shifted from “which exchange has the best features?” to “which exchange will not lose my funds?” This practical framework walks through the essential security considerations every crypto user should evaluate before trusting an exchange with their assets.
The Threat Landscape
The post-FTX environment presents a multi-layered threat landscape. On one hand, exchanges face external threats from sophisticated hackers — North Korean state-sponsored groups alone stole over $1 billion in cryptocurrency to fund missile programs, as highlighted in a January 27 White House report. On the other hand, the far more insidious threat comes from within: mismanagement of customer funds, commingling of assets, and outright fraud.
The White House economic team, led by National Economic Council Director Brian Deese, warned that Congress must act to prevent “misuses of customers’ assets” and “mitigate conflicts of interest.” The report specifically called for legislation to separate crypto banking from traditional banking, invoking the spirit of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. Meanwhile, exchanges like Binance have faced months of FUD — fear, uncertainty, and doubt — regarding their solvency and operational integrity.
Understanding this landscape is the first step toward protecting yourself. The threats are real, documented, and ongoing.
Core Principles
Three core principles should guide your exchange security evaluation. First, proof of reserves matters. Following the FTX collapse, the public demanded evidence that exchanges actually hold the assets they claim. Binance underwent an audit by Mazars in December 2022, which showed Bitcoin reserves exceeded 100% — though critics like former Kraken CEO Jesse Powell noted the audit did not include liabilities. Look for exchanges that provide comprehensive proof of reserves, including both assets and liabilities.
Second, fund segregation is non-negotiable. Your assets should be held separately from the exchange’s operational funds. The FTX collapse revealed that customer deposits were being used to fund Alameda Research trading activities — a fundamental breach of trust. Ask directly whether an exchange segregates customer funds and seek independent verification.
Third, regulatory compliance provides a safety net. Exchanges that proactively comply with regulations in multiple jurisdictions demonstrate a commitment to operational transparency. While regulation alone does not guarantee safety, it adds layers of oversight that can catch problems before they become catastrophic.
Tooling and Setup
Implementing these principles requires practical tools and processes. Start with on-chain verification — use blockchain explorers to track the wallet addresses published by exchanges in their proof-of-reserves reports. Tools like Etherscan and Blockchain.com allow you to verify that the claimed reserves actually exist on the blockchain.
Set up multi-factor authentication on every exchange account, preferably using a hardware security key rather than SMS-based 2FA, which is vulnerable to SIM-swapping attacks. Enable withdrawal whitelist features that restrict transfers to pre-approved addresses only. Use unique, strong passwords for each exchange account — a password manager makes this practical.
Monitor your accounts regularly. Set up email or SMS alerts for login attempts, withdrawals, and changes to account settings. The faster you detect unauthorized activity, the better your chances of recovering funds.
Ongoing Vigilance
Security is not a one-time setup — it requires continuous attention. Stay informed about exchange-related news. When Binance temporarily paused USDC withdrawals on December 13, 2022, the incident sparked concern — but understanding the context (a technical issue with token conversions, not a liquidity problem) prevented panic selling.
Watch for warning signs: sudden changes in withdrawal processing times, unexplained changes in leadership, aggressive marketing of high-yield products, or resistance to independent audits. The FTX collapse was preceded by multiple red flags that many chose to ignore.
Diversify your holdings across multiple exchanges and, most importantly, maintain your own self-custody wallet for long-term storage. The adage “not your keys, not your coins” became painfully relevant in November 2022.
Final Takeaway
The cryptocurrency exchange landscape has fundamentally changed since FTX. Trust must now be earned through verifiable proof, not assumed based on reputation or marketing. By applying this practical security framework — verifying reserves, ensuring fund segregation, demanding regulatory compliance, implementing strong authentication, and maintaining ongoing vigilance — you can significantly reduce your risk exposure. The tools and knowledge are available. The responsibility to use them rests with each individual user.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always conduct your own research before choosing a cryptocurrency exchange.
the FTX forensic report showed customer funds were commingled with alameda from day one. no proof of reserves would have caught it because the lie was on the liability side
The proof of reserves checklist is solid. I would add: check if the exchange uses a reputable third party auditor, not just their own word.
HodlHarry is spot on about third party auditors. the exchange auditing itself is like grading your own homework
the homework grading analogy is perfect. mazars did binsnce proof of reserves and then quit the entire crypto auditing business lmao
kyc_refugee mazars quitting crypto auditing entirely after the binance report was the funniest thing. basically said we want no part of this
if your framework has more than 5 checkboxes you already lost most users. normies need a simple rule: can you withdraw right now
cold_storage_ryan thats the real checklist. can i withdraw right now, today, to a wallet i control. everything else is noise
size equaled safety until it didnt. FTX was the 2nd biggest exchange and nobody questioned it until withdrawals stopped
North Korean groups stole over $1B and FTX lost $8B through fraud. The internal threat is always bigger than the external one.
the $8B FTX fraud vs $1B NK theft comparison is sobering. the biggest threat was always the guy in the corner office
the internal vs external threat comparison should be taught in every crypto onboarding flow. FTX wasnt hacked, it was looted from inside
the commingling section should be required reading before anyone deposits on any exchange ever again
the FTX forensic report showing commingling from day one means no external audit would have caught it. the books were cooked before anyone looked
ftx commingling from day one matches what brian deese warned about customer assets
proof of reserves needs third party like hodlharry said or it is just self grading