The report by Chainalysis found hacking activity that "ebbed and
flowed" throughout the year, with "huge spikes" in March and
October. October was the biggest single month ever for
cryptocurrency hacking, with $775.7 million stolen in 32 separate
attacks, the report said.
The cryptocurrency market floundered in 2022, as risk appetite
diminished and various crypto firms collapsed. Investors were left
with large losses and regulators stepped up calls for more consumer
protection.
At the time, Chainalysis and other firms confirmed to Reuters that
North Korean-related accounts had lost millions of dollars in value.
But that did not deter hackers.
North Korea-linked hackers such as those in the cybercriminal
syndicate Lazarus Group have been by far the most prolific
cryptocurrency hackers, stealing an estimated $1.7 billion worth of
in multiple attacks last year, the report said.
"In 2022, they shattered their own records for theft," it said.
North Korea has denied allegations of hacking or other cyberattacks.
According to a panel of experts monitoring United Nations sanctions,
North Korea has increasingly relied on hacking to fund its missile
and nuclear weapons programmes, particularly as publicly declared
trade dwindled under sanctions and COVID-19 lockdowns.
"It isn’t a stretch to say that cryptocurrency hacking is a sizable
chunk of the nation’s economy," Chainalysis said.
For the first time last year, U.S. law enforcement seized $30
million in stolen funds from North Korea-linked hackers.
"These hacks will get harder and less fruitful with each passing
year," Chainalysis predicted.
Targets in "decentralized finance" or DeFi, a thriving segment in
the cryptocurrency sector, accounted for more than 82% of the
cryptocurrency stolen in 2022, the report said.
DeFi applications, many of which run on the Ethereum blockchain, are
financial platforms that enable crypto-denominated lending outside
of traditional banks.
Last year saw a record amount of crypto transactions related to
illicit activity overall, reaching $20.1 billion, Chainalysis said
in January.
(Reporting by Josh Smith, Editing by Louise Heavens)
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