North Korea-linked Hackers Laundered $91M after Liquid.com Hack
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Main page News, North Korea, Cryptocurrency Exchanges, Hacker Attack

Stolen from Liquid.com cryptocurrency have been moved to wallets controlled by a party working on behalf of DPRK, Chainalysis has learned. The analysts say the attacker used DEX platform to swap 67 different ERC-20 tokens for ether (ETH).

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Later, ETH was mixed and then swapped for BTC. After that, the criminals mixed BTC and sent deposited the funds into crypto-to-fiat exchanges based in Asia. According to Chainalysis' estimates, the hackers laundered over $91 million in cryptocurrencies.

North Korea-linked Hackers Laundered $91M after Liquid.com Hack
chainalysis.com
Liquid Attracts $120M Debt Funding from FTX after $90M Loss

In August 2021, Liquid.com announced that an unauthorized user had gained access to some of the exchange's cryptocurrency wallets. Later, a the Japanese cryptocurrency exchange suggested that the hacker attacked its multiparty computation (MPC) system of custody.

The company said that the MPC wallet (used for warehousing and delivery management of cryptocurrencies) used by its Singapore subsidiary Quoine Pte was the main aim for the hacker. The exchange later noted it re-built its MPC infrastructure "to ensure maximum security."

Access more than 50 of the world's financial markets directly from your EXANTE account – including NASDAQ, London Stock Exchange and Tokyo Stock Exchange.

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