New Straits Times

Bithumb loses 35b won in S. Korea’s money heist

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SEOUL: South Korean cryptocurr­ency exchange Bithumb said 35 billion won (RM126 million) worth of virtual coins were stolen by hackers, the second local exchange targeted in just over a week as cyber thieves exposed the high risks of trading the digital asset.

Bithumb said in a notice on its website yesterday that it had stopped all trading after ascertaini­ng “some cryptocurr­encies worth about 35 billion won were seized between late on Tuesday and early morning yesterday”.

The exchange, the sixth busiest in the world according to Coinmarket­cap.com, said it had stored “all clients’ assets in safe cold wallets”, which operate on platforms not directly connected to the Internet.

It added that the company would fully compensate customers.

The Bithumb theft highlights the security risks and the weak regulation of global cryptocurr­ency markets.

Global policymake­rs have warned investors to be cautious in trading the digital currency, given the lack of broad regulatory oversight.

In Ho, a professor at Korea University’s Blockchain Research Institute, said the stolen coins were most likely to be from the more insecure “hot wallets”.

“Since coins in the cold wallets are not at all wired to the Internet, it would have been impossible for hackers to steal those in cold wallets unless they physically broke in,” said In, a blockchain expert at the research centre.

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