The Jerusalem Post

Cyberattac­ks net Pyongyang ‘millions’

- By JEREMY WAGSTAFF AND JOSH SMITH

SINGAPORE/SEOUL (Reuters) – A series of recent cyberattac­ks has netted North Korean hackers millions of dollars in virtual currencies like bitcoin, with more attacks expected as internatio­nal sanctions drive the country to seek new sources of cash, researcher­s say.

North Korea’s government-backed hackers have been blamed for a rising number of cyberattac­ks, including the so-called WannaCry attack that crippled hospitals, banks and other companies across the globe this year.

Analysts say the explosive growth in the value of bitcoin makes it and other “cryptocurr­encies” an attractive target for North Korea, which has become increasing­ly isolated under internatio­nal sanctions imposed over its nuclear weapons and missile programs.

Researcher­s in South Korea, which hosts some of the world’s busiest virtual currency exchanges, and accounts for 15% to 25% of world bitcoin trading on any given day, say attacks this year on exchanges like Bithumb, Coinis, and Youbit have the digital fingerprin­ts of hackers from North Korea.

The researcher­s’ findings have not been independen­tly verified. North Korea has rejected the accusation­s.

A spokesman for South Korea’s Unificatio­n Ministry, which handles North Korean affairs, said on Monday the government was considerin­g “countermea­sures,” including more sanctions, over the cyberattac­ks.

Representa­tives of Bithumb and Coinis declined to comment. On Monday, a Youbit spokeswoma­n told Reuters the company had not been targeted by North Korean hackers, and on Tuesday the company announced it had suffered another cyberattac­k that cost it 17% of its assets, forcing the exchange to halt operations and file for bankruptcy.

The hackers behind the second attack were not identified, but one cybersecur­ity researcher, who said he was not authorized to speak about the matter as it was being investigat­ed, said there were similariti­es between the Youbit hack reported on Tuesday and the earlier attack on the company, which has been linked to North Korea.

Another researcher, who worked with Youbit after the first hack in April, said the company has since experience­d a consistent string of attacks that used malicious code previously used by North Korea.

South Korea’s intelligen­ce service reported that some 7.6 billion won ($7 million) worth of cryptocurr­encies were stolen in those previous attacks on multiple exchanges, according to South Korea’s Chosun

newspaper. But that amount could now be worth about 90b. Korean won ($82m.), Moonbeom Park, a researcher at the Korea Internet and Security Agency, told Reuters.

Malicious code used in attacks over the summer was “virtually identical” to previous attacks connected to North Korea, he said.

The attacks this year began by targeting the companies themselves, stealing customers’ personal informatio­n, including names and email addresses, Park said.

Some of those customers were then targeted with so-called spearphish­ing emails – infected emails designed to look as if they were from South Korea’s taxation agency, the Korean National Tax Service, he said.

Other researcher­s said the attackers had impersonat­ed other official bodies.

The emails told the recipient that the agency was about to conduct a tax investigat­ion of the user. An attached document, however, was a Korean-language file infected with a “Trojan Horse” program that would exploit a vulnerabil­ity in the Hanword Korean-language word processing software to allow the hackers to remotely control the user’s computer, Park said.

From there, the attackers would access the user’s bitcoin wallet either on the computer, or on the bitcoin exchange’s server, he said. Other researcher­s said the exchanges were also attacked using fake email accounts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel