1. Home
  2. crypto attack

crypto attack

Radiant Capital says North Korea posed as ex-contractor to carry out $50M hack

A North Korean threat actor was behind the $50 million attack on Radiant Capital in October and spoofed being an ex-contractor, the DeFi platform said.

Radiant Capital has said a $50 million hack on its decentralized finance (DeFi) platform in October was carried out through malware sent via Telegram from a North Korea-aligned hacker posing as an ex-contractor.

Radiant said in a Dec. 6 update of the ongoing investigation that its contracted cybersecurity firm Mandiant has assessed “with high-confidence that this attack is attributable to a Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK)-nexus threat actor.”

The platform said a Radiant developer received a Telegram message with a zip file from a “trusted former contractor” on Sept. 11 asking for feedback on a new endeavor they were planning.

Read more

Trump appoints former college football player Bo Hines to head crypto council

Institutional crypto broker FPG halts withdrawals after $20M cyberattack

Floating Point Group informed customers that withdrawals had been halted after experiencing a security breach on Sunday evening.

Cryptocurrency brokerage firm Floating Point Group (FPG) has confirmed it has halted trading, withdrawals and deposits on its platform after falling victim to a cyberattack on June 11. FPG estimates the attack resulted in a total loss of between $15 million and $20 million.

According to a June 15 tweet from FPG’s official twitter account, upon discovering the security breach FPG locked all third party accounts and migrated wallets. It later halted trading, deposits and withdrawals out of “an abundance of caution.”

Additionally, the firm noted that its account segregation “limited the overall impact” of the attack.

FPG is an international brokerage firm that provides institutional clients with access to crypto markets. According to its website, FPG and its clients manage $50 billion in assets.

The latest development isn’t likely to bolster institutional appetite for the crypto sector, which has already been hit by dwindling market conditions and increased hostility from regulators.

In December 2022, FPG voluntarily consulted cybersecurity firm Prescient Auditors and received its SOC 2 Type 1 certification. This certification is an official audit that verifies the overall safety of a firm’s internal data controls.

“We are working with the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, our regulators, and Chainalysis to understand how this occurred and to recover assets,” wrote FPG in a subsequent comment.

Related: North Korean hackers swipe over $100M from Atomic Wallet users

FPG also noted that due to the ongoing nature of the investigation with respective law enforcement agencies, it couldn’t publicly share any additional details.

Cointelegraph contacted FPG for further information concerning the attack but has not yet received a response.

Magazine: Tornado Cash 2.0 — The race to build safe and legal coin mixers

Trump appoints former college football player Bo Hines to head crypto council