Fraud Detection in Cryptocurrency Transactions Using Deep Learning
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63345/Keywords:
Cryptocurrency Fraud, Anti-Money Laundering, Deep Learning, Graph Neural Networks, Anomaly Detection, Blockchain ForensicsAbstract
Cryptocurrency’s promise of open, programmable finance has been shadowed by an evolving spectrum of fraud—investment scams, phishing, ransomware monetization, and money-laundering pipelines that hop across chains and jurisdictions. Traditional rule-based monitoring struggles with scale, concept drift, and adversarial obfuscation (mixers, peel chains, cross-chain bridges). This manuscript synthesizes the state of the art and proposes an end-to-end deep learning framework for fraud detection that blends graph neural networks (GNNs) on transaction graphs with temporal sequence models, representation learning for wallets and entities, and risk-aware active learning to leverage sparse labels. We ground the discussion in public datasets (e.g., Elliptic1/Elliptic2, BitcoinHeist, XBlock-ETH) and up-to-date industry intelligence (Chainalysis, TRM Labs) and map the methodology to regulatory expectations (FATF’s standards and the Travel Rule). We describe a modular pipeline covering data engineering, graph construction, feature learning, semi-supervised training, evaluation (ROC-AUC, PR-AUC, precision@k), and explainability (counterfactual traces, subgraph rationales). Results summarized from recent literature show that GNNs and temporal graph transformers generally outperform shallow models and static heuristics, especially when augmented with edge-time features and neighborhood motif learning. We conclude with deployment guidance—human-in-the-loop triage, concept-drift monitoring, and privacy-preserving analytics—and outline limitations (label scarcity, feedback loops, evasion tactics) and future work (federated graph learning, causal inference on chain, and cross-chain entity resolution).
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