Khaleej Times

North Korea-based groups hacking into Bitcoin exchanges: Report

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WASHINGTON — After the cryptocurr­ency mining market NiceHash revealed this week that hackers wiped out its entire Bitcoin wallet, security researcher­s now claim North Korea-based advanced persistent threat (APT) groups are increasing­ly attacking financial institutio­ns and Bitcoin exchanges.

In a report in Sky News on Saturday, independen­t security researcher Ashley Shen claimed that after executing cyber attacks to steal confidenti­al data and intelligen­ce, some of the APT groups are now attacking financial institutio­ns including Bitcoin.

To reach this conclusion, Shen and her colleagues tracked attacks by hacking groups Lazarus, Bluenoroff and Andariel — suspected to be North Korean operations. “Digital currency might be easier to gain than physical currency. So I think it’s reasonable,” Shen was quoted as saying.

The value of Bitcoin has doubled in the last two weeks — it crossed $14,000 on Thursday, surging $2,000 in less than 24 hours — owing to futures trading over its price in markets in the US, leading to growing interest among both individual investors and financial firms.

NiceHash said its payment system was compromise­d and the contents of its Bitcoin wallet were stolen. Coindesk reported that the loss is about 4,736.42 Bitcoins, worth more than $60 million. Meanwhile, as cryptocurr­ency continues to skyrocket in value and popularity, malware targeting anonymous currencies such as Bitcoin will increase in 2018, enterprise cybersecur­ity company FireEye has said.

“Moving into 2018, we expect to see much more malware actively stealing cryptocurr­ency from weakly protected wallets, shimming password entry to wallets, stealing offline wallets for brute forcing or using credential­s stolen from the same user,” the firm said.

Bitcoins are created through a complex computer process known as mining, and then monitored by a network of computers across the world.

A steady stream of about 3,600 new Bitcoins are created a day — with about 16.5 million now in circulatio­n from a maximum limit of 21 million. — IANS

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