“Helping Companies Reduce Human Error”: Elliptic’s James Smith on Using AI to Track Crypto Crimes

Crypto crime token2049
“We’re helping our customers simplify how they respond to alerts and reduce human error."
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Jai Pratap
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Jai serves as the Asia Desk Editor for Cryptonews.com, where he leads a diverse team of international reporters. Jai has over five years of experience covering the web3 industry.

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Twelve years ago, when Elliptic launched with a mission to bring compliance and anti-money laundering tools to the world of crypto, most companies simply didn’t care.

“In the early days, people didn’t think compliance was necessary,” James Smith, co-founder of Elliptic, told Cryptonews in an exclusive interview at Token2049 Dubai. “There were a few early believers — Coinbase has been a customer for nearly a decade — but most didn’t see the need.”

Fast forward to 2025, and the landscape has radically shifted. With banks and traditional financial institutions entering the space, regulatory compliance has gone from optional to essential. “Now, nobody builds anything without thinking about compliance from day one,” Smith noted.

From Reluctance to Regulation

Smith credits this shift not just to industry maturity, but to evolving regulatory environments. While early frameworks like New York’s BitLicense quickly became outdated, newer efforts — particularly in Europe — show promise.

“In the US, stablecoin regulation has lagged behind, with enforcement taking precedence over clarity,” he noted.

“But we’re seeing movement with bills like the Stable Act. Europe’s ahead in this regard — MiCA has given clearer rules, and we’re seeing banks become more comfortable experimenting with tokenized deposits and even launching their own stablecoins.”

Elliptic recently partnered with Morabanc in Europe to further navigate this regulatory terrain, especially around stablecoins.

The Age of Public Chains and Bank Adoption

Historically, banks experimenting with blockchain leaned toward private ecosystems. That’s changing. “More banks now understand the real value lies in open, connected systems,” Smith noted. “You get efficiency when you remove the air gaps between chains.”

Elliptic sees growing interest from European banks in exploring how public blockchains and stablecoins can reduce friction in cross-border payments and asset transfers.

AI, Automation, and the Arms Race Against Crypto Crimes

With rising transaction volumes and sophisticated criminal tactics, Elliptic has embraced AI and automation to stay ahead. “We’re helping our customers simplify how they respond to alerts and reduce human error,” said Elliptic co-founder. “Automation is key to scaling compliance as the market grows.”

Criminals are early adopters of new tech. From mixers to multi-chain hops, illicit actors continue to innovate.

“A third of the complex cases our customers investigate now involve at least three blockchains. We’ve had to build systems that follow the money across bridges, DEXs, and protocols — and identify the real beneficiaries behind the wallets.”

Inside the Bybit Hack and DPRK’s Crypto Playbook

Smith recalls the recent $1.5 billion Bybit hack vividly — it broke just as Hong Kong Consensus wrapped. “We spotted the red flags quickly — the movement patterns matched DPRK-linked activity from past hacks.”

Within hours, Elliptic’s intel team was working around the clock, collaborating with Bybit and sharing a public blacklist of flagged addresses.

“It was a coordinated laundering effort. They moved funds into native ETH, then swapped it for BTC through DEXs and no-KYC platforms. Thorchain alone processed over $1.2 billion, generating fees for LPs — a troubling incentive.”

What’s Next for Elliptic

Looking ahead, Elliptic plans to expand support for more blockchains (currently over 50) and enhance its AI-driven tools. “We want our clients to grow without needing to hire a new analyst every time trading volumes spike,” Smith noted.

As regulation and risk converge, Smith believes businesses must act not just for compliance — but for the industry’s future. “The best ones always played by the rules they knew were coming,” he says. “That’s how you build something lasting.”

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