On Friday, it emerged that North Korea had conducted nine ballistic missile launches in January alone — and Washington claims this is the most in the country's history.
Attacks on crypto exchanges are now "an important revenue source" for North Korea, according to a UN report.
The document — seen by the Reuters news agency — says hackers from the secretive state are continuing to target trading platforms that deal in digital assets.
Crypto has likely become important for Kim Jong Un's regime because of tough economic sanctions that have been imposed by the UN — with the cross-border nature of digital assets allowing them to sidestep these restrictions.
On Friday, it emerged that North Korea had conducted nine ballistic missile launches in January alone — and Washington claims this is the most in the country's history.
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A Growing Problem
Blockchain intelligence firms have been gaining a growing understanding of how North Korean hackers operate — with Chainalysis explaining that "phishing lures, code exploits, malware and advanced social engineering" are used to siphon funds out of victims' hot wallets and into addresses controlled by the country. From here, a "careful laundering process to cover up and cash out" begins.
Mixing services are used, and the vast majority of stolen crypto ends up being converted into Bitcoin and "sent to deposit addresses at crypto-to-fiat exchanges based in Asia."
"Systematic and sophisticated, North Korea's government — be it through the Lazarus Group or its other criminal syndicates — has cemented itself as an advanced persistent threat to the cryptocurrency industry in 2021."