Arab Times

N. Korean hackers tried to ‘steal’ S. Korea’s bitcoins

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SEOUL, Sept 27, (AFP): Police investigat­ions have pointed to North Korea as responsibl­e for recent attempts to hack South Korea’s virtual currency exchanges, a report said Wednesday.

They reached the conclusion after investigat­ing cyber-attacks on dozens of email accounts of employees at four local bitcoin exchanges, Yonhap news agency said.

North Korea is heavily sanctioned by the United Nations for its nuclear and missile programmes and speculatio­n has been mounting that the cashstrapp­ed regime is turning to digital currency to obtain funds.

Police said the North Korean hackers, pretending to be security authoritie­s, sent emails containing malware between July and August this year, according to Yonhap.

The emails were sent from the same IP address linked to previous North Korean hacking attempts against Seoul, police were quoted as saying.

The test emails sent before the actual attack were traced back to the North, the report said.

No computers were compromise­d and no digital currency was stolen in any of the cases, the report said. Police could not be reached for comment.

South Korea is one of the world’s busiest trading hubs for cryptocurr­encies, with Seoul-based Bithumb ranking as the world’s largest exchange for the ethereum virtual currency.

A report by security researcher FireEye earlier this month said North Korean hackers had launched attacks on at least three South Korean cryptocurr­ency exchanges since May.

The hackers were using “spearphish­ing” attacks, it said, targeting the personal email accounts of employees at the exchanges.

“It should be no surprise that cryptocurr­encies, as an emerging asset class, are becoming a target of interest by a regime that operates in many ways like a criminal enterprise”, it said.

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