North Korea ‘Stole $721m’ In Crypto From Japan

North Korean hackers have stolen $721 million (£579m) in cryptocurrency from Japan since 2017, the Nikkei business journal has reported, citing figures from UK blockchain analysis firm Elliptic.

The figures, compiled by Elliptic on behalf of Nikkei, found that North Korean hackers had stolen a total of $2.3bn in cryptocurrency from 2017 to 2022.

Japan was the largest single target, accounting for 30 percent of the worldwide total, followed by Vietnam with $540m the US with $497m and Hong Kong with $281m.

Elliptic estimated the hackers stole a total of $640m in 2022 alone.

Seoul, South Korea. Image credit: Pexels

Missile programme

The figures follow a UN report on the issue last month that found crypto theft had doubled since 2021.

In a joint statement released on Saturday by the Group of Seven finance ministers and central bank governors in Japan, officials said they support measures to counter the “growing threat from illicit activities by state actors”, including crypto theft.

Japan has created a favourable regulatory environment for cryptocurrency, with crypto payments firm Triple-A estimating that some 4 percent of the population, or 5 million people, own digital assets.

Last week the US administration estimated about half of North Korea’s missile programme has been funded by cyberattacks and cryptocurrency theft.

Anne Neuberger, deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology, told an event that a US federal government effort is ongoing to understand how “a country like [North Korea] is so darn creative in this space”.

Crypto heist

US intelligence agencies are working to identify North Korean operatives and the US Treasury is tracing stolen cryptocurrency, Neuberger said.

The Justice Department last month charged a North Korean Foreign Trade Bank representative with an elaborate money laundering scheme that involved employees of US crypto firms to turn stolen cryptocurrency into cash.

Separately US authorities also sanctioned two Chinese nationals, one from Hong Kong and another from the mainland, who it said had also laundered cryptocurrency for the North Korean regime.

The US maintains North Korean hackers stole some $625m from Ronin Network last year in the biggest crypto heist to date.

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

OpenAI Tests Search Engine Prototype Called ‘SearchGPT’

Google's dominance of online search is being challenged, after OpenAI unveiled a search prototype tool…

15 hours ago

Elon Musk To Discuss $5 Billion xAI Investment With Tesla Board

Conflict of interest? Elon Musk to talk with Tesla board about making $5 billion Tesla…

19 hours ago

Amazon Developing Cheaper AI Chips – Report

Engineers at Amazon's chip lab in Austin, Texas, are racing ahead to develop cheaper AI…

1 day ago

Apple Smartphone Sales In China Drop 6.7 Percent, Canalys Finds

China woes. Apple's China smartphone shipments decline during the second quarter, dropping it down into…

2 days ago

Meta Ordered To Clean Up AI-Generated Porn By Oversight Board

Oversight Board orders Meta to clarify rules over sexually explicit AI-generated images, after two fake…

2 days ago