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Banks Can Hide Fat Finger Errors but Crypto Is Transparent


Paxos' accidental minting of $300 trillion in PYUSD on Wednesday, while undoubtedly alarming, serves as a case study in why blockchain shines in traditional banking.

On Wednesday, Paxos accidentally minted $300 trillion worth of stablecoin PayPal USD (PYUSD), calling it an “internal technical error.”

But what is important is that blockchain technology allowed the error to be quickly identified and corrected.

The incident occurred on October 15 at 7:12 PM UTC, and the entire lot was incinerated after just 22 minutes, as onlookers discovered it almost immediately.

source: Ted pillows

The same cannot be said about the traditional banking sector.

“Mistakes happen in every financial system – the difference with blockchain is that they are visible, can be tracked and corrected quickly,” Kate Cooper, CEO of OKX Australia, told Cointelegraph. “Transparency is a strength, not a flaw,” she added.

Cooper, who spent nearly a decade as an executive at two of Australia's largest banks before turning to cryptocurrencies, said the Paxos incident highlights how the openness and transparency of blockchain could transform financial oversight.

“As a former banker, I see this as evidence that visibility builds trust. The same rails that expose error can also strengthen governance and modernize how value moves through the financial system.”

A level of accountability “unheard of” in traditional banking

Ren Sachs, CEO of stablecoin liquidity platform Eco, noted that blockchain provides a level of accountability rarely found in traditional finance.

“Perhaps the most overlooked aspect of the inescapable stablecoin economy is the benefit of transparency required from cash issuers. This was an extreme case, but still useful,” Sachs told Cointelegraph.

“This level of transparency, and real-time coordination, is unheard of in today’s central bank economy.”

Banks have a history of finger transactions

In April 2024, Citigroup accidentally credited $81 trillion to a customer's account instead of $281, taking hours to reverse the transaction. The media did not hear about him until about 10 months later.

In the same month, another Citigroup employee transferred nearly $6 billion to a Wealth client after pasting the client's account number into the payment amount box. It also took 10 months to report the incident.