Illustration of Upbit crypto exchange cyber breach by suspected North Korean Lazarus hackers, showing digital coins leaking from building amid investigation.
Imagem gerada por IA

North Korean Lazarus group suspected in Upbit crypto hack

Imagem gerada por IA

North Korea's hacking group Lazarus is suspected of being behind a recent breach of around 45 billion won ($30.6 million) in cryptocurrency from South Korea's largest exchange Upbit. Authorities plan an on-site investigation, while Upbit operator Dunamu will cover the full loss with its own assets. The incident resembles a 2019 hack at Upbit attributed to the same group.

Government and business sources said on Friday that North Korea's Lazarus group is suspected in the theft of 44.5 billion won worth of Solana-affiliated assets from Upbit, South Korea's largest cryptocurrency exchange. Dunamu, Upbit's operator, confirmed the transfer to an unauthorized wallet address on Thursday and pledged to cover the full amount using its own assets.

Authorities intend to conduct an on-site investigation at the exchange, believing Lazarus is responsible. A government official said, "Instead of attacking the server, it is possible that hackers compromised administrators' accounts or posed as administrators to make the transfer."

The methods mirror a 2019 incident where Lazarus was suspected of stealing 58 billion won in Ethereum from Upbit. A security official noted, "It is the tactic of Lazarus to transfer crypto to wallets at other exchanges and attempt money laundering," which complicates tracking.

The hack occurred amid Pyongyang's efforts to raise funds due to a foreign currency shortage. Experts suggest hackers timed the attack for Thursday, following Naver Corp.'s Wednesday announcement to acquire Dunamu as a wholly owned subsidiary through a share-swap deal. Another security official remarked, "Hackers have a strong tendency toward self-display."

This incident highlights ongoing North Korean cyber threats targeting cryptocurrency, prompting heightened responses from South Korean authorities.

O que as pessoas estão dizendo

X users widely discuss suspicions linking North Korea's Lazarus group to the $30M Upbit hack, noting similarities to the 2019 incident. Concerns over CEX vulnerabilities dominate, with promotions for DEX security. Upbit's pledge to fully reimburse users receives positive mentions. Some express skepticism about North Korean involvement and question ongoing threats. Authorities' investigation is anticipated.

Artigos relacionados

Illustration of North Korean hackers in a cyber command center stealing a record $2 billion in cryptocurrency from global exchanges like Bybit.
Imagem gerada por IA

Coreia do Norte rouba recorde de US$ 2 bilhões em criptomoedas em 2025

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA

Hackers norte-coreanos roubaram um recorde de US$ 2,02 bilhões em criptomoedas em 2025, de acordo com um novo relatório da Chainalysis, superando o roubo do ano anterior em 51% e elevando seu total para US$ 6,75 bilhões. Os roubos, que representaram 60% do total global de US$ 3,4 bilhões roubados, foram impulsionados por menos, mas maiores ataques, incluindo uma violação de US$ 1,5 bilhão na exchange Bybit, sediada em Dubai, em fevereiro. Especialistas atribuem o sucesso a táticas sofisticadas como a inserção de trabalhadores de TI em empresas de cripto e a impersonificação de recrutadores.

Building on a Chainalysis report documenting $2.02 billion in 2025 cryptocurrency thefts by North Korean hackers, a U.S. State Department official told a U.N. meeting that Pyongyang likely stole more than $2 billion last year to support its nuclear and missile programs. The figure aligns with Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Team findings of over $1.6 billion stolen from January to September 2025.

Reportado por IA

South Korea's customs authorities announced on Monday that they have uncovered an international crime ring accused of laundering about 150 billion won ($101.7 million) worth of cryptocurrency through an unauthorized foreign exchange scheme. Three Chinese nationals have been referred to the prosecution for violations of the foreign exchange transactions act. The suspects allegedly laundered 148.9 billion won between September 2021 and June of last year using domestic and overseas cryptocurrency accounts and South Korean bank accounts.

South Korea's presidential office is set to hold an emergency meeting on December 25 over a massive data breach at e-commerce giant Coupang. The leak affected 33.7 million customers, undermining the company's delivery model built on social trust. A former U.S. security adviser has criticized Korean scrutiny as aggressive targeting of a U.S.-listed firm.

Reportado por IA

Um homem sul-coreano na casa dos 30 anos que lavou US$ 68.000 em criptomoedas para uma gangue de phishing por voz teve sua pena suspensa revogada. O Tribunal Superior de Suwon impôs uma pena de quatro anos de prisão após ele apelar por leniência. A decisão destaca seu papel central nas operações da fraude.

Uma violação de dados em 2022 no gerenciador de senhas LastPass resultou em roubos prolongados de criptomoedas, segundo a empresa de inteligência em blockchain TRM Labs. O incidente envolveu cofres de usuários roubados que facilitaram cerca de US$ 35 milhões em perdas que se estendem até 2025.

Reportado por IA

Hackers norte-coreanos começaram a explorar uma vulnerabilidade crítica conhecida como React2Shell em ataques de malware. Isso segue ações semelhantes de hackers chineses, indicando um interesse crescente por essa falha de segurança. O problema representa riscos significativos para os sistemas afetados.

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar