Blockchain News

Why did crypto dump overnight? Blame Japan

Getting hacked in crypto doesn’t feel like some wild, action-movie heist scene.

It’s way simpler: one wrong click, and boom – your coins are gone before your coffee even cools.

And the people waiting for your wrong click might not be some bored teens. They could be North Korea’s Lazarus Group, who’ve basically turned stealing your crypto into an Olympic event.

Hacker

AhnLab, a cybersecurity firm in South Korea, has actually been tracking their moves. And they noticed a trend: spear phishing.

“What’s that?” – you, maybe. Glad you asked.

Regular phishing is the “spray and pray” stuff: mass emails, typos, fake UPS messages, whatever. They don’t care who bites.

Spear phishing is the opposite.

It’s targeted. Personal. They pick you intentionally.

Then they craft an email that looks exactly like something you’d normally trust – a job offer you were expecting, a partner you work with, a conference invite that matches your industry.

They copy the tone. They mimic logos.

They study your LinkedIn, Twitter, GitHub, everything.

When you open it, it feels legit because it’s designed specifically to trick your brain, not everyone’s.

Spear phishing attacks are a more sophisticated version of phishing that typically requires research and planning from the attacker. Source: Kaspersky

Source: Kaspersky

And the results speak for themselves. Lazarus is suspected of stealing BILLIONS from crypto companies and users.

AhnLab says Lazarus showed up in 31 post-incident reports last year, more than any other group.

Now, here’s the part that should really get your attention: AI is giving them upgrades.

AhnLab says attackers are already using AI to generate ultra-clean phishing emails and clone websites that look even better than the real ones.

And yes – deepfake calls are on the horizon. Imagine “your boss” asking you to share a file on a video call, and it’s not your boss at all.

(CHILLS!)

But what’s the takeaway? Not fear – awareness.

❗️ Use MFA. Verify senders. Slow down before clicking. Don’t trust surprise job offers, random attachments, or anything that makes you say “Hmm, weird…” even for half a second. ❗️

Because in crypto, there’s no customer service line to negotiate with. If Lazarus gets your keys, they’re gone.

Your best defense is not giving them the opening in the first place.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button