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Bitcoin has rough week, plunging 11%

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Bitcoin has rough week, plunging 11%

Bitcoin had one of its worst weeks of 2023, with more than $1 billion of the cryptocurrency liquidated in the past 24 hours alone.

Bitcoin is now punching in at about $26,000, nearing lows last seen during a June dip. That represents an 11% decline since the start of the week and nearly 8% losses in just the past day. Other cryptocurrencies were also flagging this week, with nearly all of the 100 largest coins in the red.

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Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency, was down about 5.5% on Friday to about $1,660, and Ripple plunged nearly 20% since the start of the week, falling to about 51 cents per coin.

It appears as though the pullbacks in the crypto market are emanating from broader macroeconomic factors, plus a report about SpaceX. Rising interest rates have rattled the market as the Federal Reserve continues to tighten monetary policy, at least for the time being.

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“U.S. interest rates are rising to multiyear highs. The 10-year yield has pushed to 15-year highs. This is bearish risk assets in general,” Decentral Park Capital trader Lewis Harland told CoinDesk. “If this sell-off in bonds continues we could see continued negative price action in risk assets into the weekend.”

Additionally, there have been growing concerns about China’s economic situation and how its slowing growth could ripple out into the broader globalized economy.

China is staring down several economic problems and is working to obfuscate just how dire the situation might be. This week, it suddenly slashed rates in a clear signal that Beijing is worried about the country’s economic outlook. The People’s Bank of China lowered the rate on its one-year loans to 2.5% on Tuesday, the second cut since June.

Also this week, China announced it would suspend publication of the youth unemployment rate. The official excuse was that it needed to be better calculated, although it is noteworthy that youth unemployment has risen to new highs in recent months.

The country is also facing a property crisis, with massive property developer China Evergrande filing for bankruptcy protection on Thursday.

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Because of how interwoven the U.S. economy is with China through trade, the fear is that if Beijing’s economic outlook keeps darkening, it could cause economic pain stateside.

The Wall Street Journal, citing documents, reported this week that SpaceX wrote down the value of the bitcoin it owns by more than $370 million last year and in 2021 and has offloaded the cryptocurrency.

Also, digital assets have become increasingly tethered to traditional stocks, which have been falling this week. In downturns, investors typically flee risky investments in favor of safer and more stable stores of value. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are still a new asset class.

In fact, the stock market is on track to post its worst week since March.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed more than 750 since the start of the week, or about 2%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq is off by about 2.5%, and the S&P 500 fell by about 2% over the past five days.

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Despite this week’s decline, bitcoin is in the black for the year and has delivered better year-to-date returns than traditional assets.

After an abysmal 2022, which was marked with more regulatory crackdowns and the collapse of FTX, bitcoin is up 56% since the start of January. Ethereum rose 38% since the start of the year, and Ripple has popped by 48%.

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North Korean hackers linked to hack of 4,500 bitcoins from Japanese crypto exchange – SiliconANGLE

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North Korean hackers linked to hack of 4,500 bitcoins from Japanese crypto exchange – SiliconANGLE

North Korean hackers linked to the infamous Lazarus hacking group have been identified as being behind the theft of more than 4,500 bitcoins from Japanese cryptocurrency exchange DMM Bitcoin earlier this year.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation, in conjunction with the Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center and National Police Agency of Japan, has revealed that hackers who go by the name of TraderTraitor, an arm of Lazarus, successfully stole the equivalent of $308 million from DMM in May and have detailed how the North Korean hackers did so.

The investigation into the hack found that in late March 2024, a North Korean cyber actor pretending to be a recruiter on LinkedIn contacted an employee at Ginco, a Japanese enterprise cryptocurrency wallet software company. The threat actor sent the target, who maintained access to Ginco’s wallet management system, a URL linked to a malicious Python script under the guise of a pre-employment test located on a GitHub page. The victim copied the Python code to their personal GitHub page and was subsequently compromised.

With the access gained, the TraderTraitor hackers sat patiently, waiting until May to exploit their access. To steal the bitcoin, the actors exploited session cookie information to impersonate the compromised employee and successfully gained access to Ginco’s unencrypted communications system. With this access, it’s believed that the hackers then manipulated a legitimate transaction request from a DMM employee, resulting in the theft of 4,502.9 bitcoin.

The stolen bitcoin was subsequently transferred to TraderTraitor-controlled wallets, which ultimately lead back to the North Korean government.

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“The FBI, National Police Agency of Japan and other U.S. government and international partners will continue to expose and combat North Korea’s use of illicit activities — including cybercrime and cryptocurrency theft — to generate revenue for the regime,” the FBI noted in a statement.

The involvement of both North Korea and an arm of Lazarus in the hack comes as no surprise, as the hack of DMM isn’t the first time Lazarus has targeted cryptocurrency exchanges.

In 2022, Lazarus was linked to the hack on the Ronin Network that led to the theft of $615 million in cryptocurrency, and more recently, in July, the group was linked to the theft of $234.9 million in cryptocurrency from India-based cryptocurrency exchange WazirX.

Image: SiliconANGLE/Ideogram

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Japan, US blame North Koreans for $300 million crypto theft

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Japan, US blame North Koreans for 0 million crypto theft

INQUIRER.net stock images

Tokyo, Japan — A North Korean hacking group stole cryptocurrency worth over $300 million from the Japan-based exchange DMM Bitcoin, according to Japanese police and the United States’ FBI.

The TraderTraitor group — believed to be part of Lazarus Group, which is allegedly linked to the Pyongyang authorities — carried out the heist, Japan’s National Police Agency said Tuesday.

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Lazarus Group gained notoriety a decade ago when it was accused of hacking into Sony Pictures as revenge for “The Interview,” a film that mocked North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

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READ: Philippines ranks 2nd in cryptocurrency ownership globally — study

The FBI detailed “the theft of cryptocurrency worth $308 million US dollars from the Japan-based cryptocurrency company DMM by North Korean cyber actors” in a separate statement dated Monday.

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It described a “targeted social engineering” operation where a hacker pretended to be a recruiter on LinkedIn to contact an employee of a different crypto wallet software company.

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They sent the employee what appeared to be a pre-employment test, which actually contained a malicious line of code.

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That allowed the hacker to compromise their system and impersonate the employee, the FBI said.

“In late May 2024, the actors likely used this access to manipulate a legitimate transaction request by a DMM employee, resulting in the loss of 4,502.9 Bitcoin, worth $308 million at the time,” it said.

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“The FBI, National Police Agency of Japan, and other US government and international partners will continue to expose and combat North Korea’s use of illicit activities — including cybercrime and cryptocurrency theft — to generate revenue for the regime,” it said.

North Korea’s cyber-warfare program dates back to at least the mid-1990s.



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It has since grown to a 6,000-strong cyber-warfare unit known as Bureau 121 that operates from several countries, according to a 2020 US military report.

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North Korean hacker group identified in theft of DMM Bitcoin assets

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North Korean hacker group identified in theft of DMM Bitcoin assets

A North Korea-linked hacker group stole digital assets worth 48.2 billion yen ($307 million) from Tokyo-based cryptocurrency exchange DMM Bitcoin Co. in May, Japanese police said Tuesday.

The hacker group was identified by the police as TraderTraitor following an investigation conducted in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Defense and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

DMM Bitcoin said earlier this month it will go out of business after suspending some of its services following the detection of the unauthorized leakage of funds on May 31.

Photo illustration shows a visual representation of the digital cryptocurrency Bitcoin. (Getty/Kyodo)

The police tracked the flow of stolen bitcoin to an account managed by the group, which is suspected to be linked to the Lazarus hacking group allegedly sponsored by the North Korean government.

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The investigation found that an employee at a company that manages DMM Bitcoin’s cryptocurrency accounts was contacted via the LinkedIn social network by a person purporting to be a headhunter.

The perpetrator then breached the wallet management system by planting malware and falsified transaction amounts as well as the destinations of remittances, the police said.

In September, Japan’s Financial Services Agency ordered the exchange to improve operations, saying its risk management structure was inadequate.

No customers suffered financial damage as the exchange secured 55 billion yen from a group firm to cover the lost assets.

The police, the FBI, and other U.S. government and international partners will “continue to expose and combat North Korea’s use of illicit activities,” including cybercrime and cryptocurrency theft, to generate revenue for the regime, they said in a statement.

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Related coverage:

Japanese publisher paid $3 million to hacker group after cyberattack

Japan’s DMM Bitcoin to end business after losing 48 bil. yen in leak

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