North Korea


Vídeos

North Korean Hackers Stole $41 Million From Crypto Gambling Site, FBI Says

According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the North Korea-linked hacker collective Lazarus Group was behind this month’s hack of crypto casino and betting platform Stake. "First Mover" host Jennifer Sanasie and The Tie Director of Content Lawrence Lewitinn weigh in on the latest developments and the performance of crypto gambling tokens.

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Regulación

Los hackers norcoreanos robaron 41 millones de dólares de un sitio de apuestas con Cripto , según el FBI.

Github advirtió en julio que los piratas informáticos de la RPDC estaban atacando sitios de Cripto y juegos de azar.

North Korean head Kim Jong-Un (Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)

Regulación

Roman Storm, desarrollador de Tornado Cash, se declara inocente de lavado de dinero y otros cargos.

Los fiscales alegan que Storm y sus compañeros desarrolladores Roman Semenov y Alexey Pertsev ayudaron a los malos actores a lavar más de mil millones de dólares en Cripto robadas.

(Shutterstock)

Vídeos

North Korean Hackers May Cash Out Stolen Crypto; State of Crypto in Hong Kong

Host Angie Lau takes a deep dive into the state of crypto in Asia as Hong Kong Virtual Asset Exchange (HKVAX) becomes the third licensed crypto operator in the city. Plus, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) warns that North Korea-based hackers Lazarus Group and APT38 may attempt to cash out stolen bitcoin (BTC) worth more than $40 million. Those stories and other news shaping the cryptocurrency world are in this episode of "Forkast IQ."

Forkast IQ

Vídeos

Sam Bankman-Fried's Defense Strategy; Binance.US Customers Now Have Access to MoonPay

“CoinDesk Daily” host Jennifer Sanasie dives into today’s hottest stories in crypto, as bitcoin hovers around $26,300 and XRP has lost nearly all its gains since the historic Ripple ruling. FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried has settled on a legal strategy ahead of his criminal trial this October. The FBI is warning North Korean hackers could try to sell millions of dollars worth of bitcoin. And, Binance.US customers now have access to MoonPay.

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Vídeos

North Korean Hackers May Try to Sell $40M Worth of Bitcoin, FBI Warns

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said in a statement that North Korea-based hackers Lazarus Group and APT38 may attempt to cash out stolen bitcoin (BTC) worth more than $40 million. In January, the FBI named the two groups as being behind last year's Horizon Bridge hack, which resulted in the loss of over $100 million. "The Hash" panel discusses their reaction to law enforcement's latest actions against bad actors.

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Finanzas

El FBI afirma que hackers norcoreanos podrían intentar vender 40 millones de dólares en Bitcoin

El FBI publicó seis billeteras vinculadas a los piratas informáticos norcoreanos Lazarus Group y APT38.

FBI tracks $40 million of North Korea-linked bitcoin. (David Trinks/Unsplash)

Vídeos

Three Quarters of Jurisdictions Not Complying With Global Crypto Laundering Norms, FATF Says

Most jurisdictions still aren’t fully complying with international anti-money laundering norms for crypto, according to standard-setter the Financial Action Task Force (FATF). The global anti-money laundering watchdog also added that North Korea is using illicit virtual assets to fund weapons of mass destruction. "The Hash" panel weighs in on the latest report.

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Tecnología

Los hackers de Atomic Wallet transfieren fondos robados a través de Garantex, una plataforma de intercambio autorizada por la OFAC: Elliptic

Se cree que los atacantes son el infame grupo de hackers norcoreano Lazarus, según la empresa de seguridad blockchain Elliptic.

Cypher Protocol suffers exploit (Clint Patterson/Unsplash)

Regulación

El Departamento del Tesoro de EE. UU. sanciona las billeteras Binance de propiedad norcoreana; afirma que las entidades utilizaron fondos para apoyar programas de armas de destrucción masiva.

Las billeteras alojadas en Binance recibieron más de 2 millones de dólares en varias criptomonedas que luego se enviaron a entidades norcoreanas, alegó la OFAC.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)