North Korea Hacker The World's Largest Cryptocurrency Theft Thing

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SEOUL - South Korea's intelligence agency said the North Korean hacker could be behind the theft of 530 million dollars worth of virtual coin from a cryptocurrency exchange in Japan last month. It was expressed by South Korean intelligence agencies to MPs as revealed by a number of parties who know the problem.

People, who have knowledge of the parliamentary intelligence committee process, told Reuters on Tuesday (6/2/2018) that the National Intelligence Service did not show evidence that North Korean hackers were responsible for one of the largest criptocurrency theft in history but marked it as a possibility.

Local media had earlier reported the intelligence agency told an intelligence committee that North Korean hackers might have hacked into a Tokyo-based stock exchange.

"This is a possibility that North Korea is behind the theft," said one of the people who spoke with Reuters.

The person said the virtual coin market remains the main target of North Korean hackers because of the size and lightness of regulations. But there is no solid evidence that North Korea is responsible.

Last month, Coincheck, one of the largest criptocurrency bourses in Japan, said that 58 billion yen ($ 530 million) worth of NEM virtual coins were stolen and would return 46.3 billion yen to investors who have lost money.

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The World's Largest Cryptocurrency Theft Happens in Japan

"This is possible, but not a scenario that may be supported by evidence that North Korea is behind the theft," another source spoke with Reuters.

The two sources who spoke to Reuters declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the problem. A spokesman for NIS declined to comment.

The report has rekindled Pyongyang's speculation of releasing cyber attacks. The US has publicly blamed North Korea for launching a WannaCry cyber attack that crippled hospitals, banks and other companies around the world by 2017.

A South Korean lawmaker on Monday said that North Koreans are responsible for the loss of billions of cryptocurrencies due to the theft of a cryptocurre exchange.

Secure