US Treasury Offers Free Cybersecurity Intelligence to Crypto Industry

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US Treasury Offers Free Cybersecurity Intelligence to Crypto Industry

US Treasury To Give Crypto Industry Cybersecurity Intelligence at No Cost

By Noah Carter

The US Treasury is opening federal cyber threat sharing to the crypto sector, giving qualified firms access to the same defensive intelligence used across traditional finance without charging for participation.

In a release published on April 9, 2026, the U.S. Department of the Treasury said its Office of Cybersecurity and Critical Infrastructure Protection (OCCIP) will share timely, actionable cybersecurity information with eligible U.S. digital asset firms and industry organizations.

Treasury said those participants can receive the same actionable cyber intelligence provided to traditional U.S. financial institutions at no cost, and Nextgov separately reported that qualifying crypto firms can access existing threat-intelligence channels without fees.

What the Treasury Announced and Why It Matters Now

Key Takeaway

  • Treasury moved OCCIP threat sharing into the digital asset sector.
  • Eligible crypto firms can receive the same intelligence as banks at no cost.
  • The launch is tied to federal digital-asset policy implementation, not a one-off bulletin.

Treasury explicitly linked the initiative to a recommendation in the President’s Working Group report, Strengthening American Leadership in Digital Financial Technology, under the broader policy framework tied to EO 14178.

In Treasury’s policy framing, the rollout also aligns with GENIUS Act principles around responsible innovation and operational resilience as federal digital-asset standards mature through the April 9 launch.

In practical terms, the “crypto industry” here covers U.S.-based exchanges, custodians, stablecoin issuers, brokerages, and trade organizations that meet Treasury eligibility terms described in the official announcement.

What ‘No-Cost Cybersecurity Intelligence’ Could Include for Crypto Companies

The information stream described by Treasury and independent reporting points to operational outputs such as threat alerts, technical indicators, actor-pattern updates, and vulnerability advisories that security teams can use to reduce detection and response time, according to the Treasury release and Nextgov coverage.

As Treasury’s OCCIP Director Cory Wilson said:

“Cyber threats targeting digital asset platforms are growing in frequency and sophistication.”

— Cory Wilson via U.S. Treasury

For larger firms, shared federal indicators can tighten security operations center triage; for smaller operators, no-fee access can offset intelligence costs that are often hard to absorb, especially after incidents such as the breach detailed in Bitcoin Depot Reports $3.7M Loss After Corporate Wallet Breach.

Implementation boundaries still matter: Treasury has confirmed the no-cost model and channel access, but onboarding, data-handling, and participation mechanics will depend on final operational terms described through the OCCIP program rollout.

Implications for Compliance, Market Confidence, and Sector Risk

The urgency is reinforced by incident data: Chainalysis reported that the Drift Protocol attack on April 1, 2026 led to a $285 million loss and removed more than 50% of the protocol’s TVL.

That risk framing matches the $285 million Drift impact and helps explain why Treasury is broadening public-private cyber coordination now.

“the greatest risks are no longer just in smart contracts, but in the systems, and people, that surround them.”

— Chainalysis Team via Chainalysis

At fetch time, Bitcoin was reported at $71,967, which keeps security headlines tightly connected to market-risk sentiment while Treasury expands institutional-grade threat sharing.

Bitcoin Price (USD)
$71,967
BTC was reported at this level at fetch time in the research brief.

The same dataset put Bitcoin’s market cap at $1,438,776,799,097.14, with a 1.1648932795782707% 24h change and $38,992,319,280.82458 in 24h volume.

Bitcoin Market Cap (USD)
$1.44T
Derived from the reported market cap value in the research brief at fetch time.

Near term, readers should watch adoption signals from eligible firms, whether intelligence sharing feeds into stronger governance controls, and whether security-led enforcement pressure continues alongside asset-freeze actions such as Operation Atlantic Freezes $12M in Crypto Scam Proceeds: Key Facts.

Longer term, the Treasury rollout suggests cyber resilience is becoming a baseline expectation across digital-asset business models, including firms adapting capital strategy as covered in CoreWeave’s $8.5B Deal Signals Shift From Crypto Mining to AI Finance.


Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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