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Debridge team fails potential Lazarus Group Cyberattack

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  • Lazarus Group of North Korea is under suspicion.
  • The cyberattack on Debridge has been prevented.
  • BlueNorff is also targeting the cyber space.

Lazarus group, a cybercrime group run in the North Korean state, is under suspicion for an attempted cyberattack on deBridge Finance on Thursday.

A failed cyberattack by the Lazarus group of North Korea has been prevented.

On Friday, the co-founder of a liquidity transfer protocol, DeBridge, Alex Smirnov, twitted that the cyberattack had strived on the team of the company. The attack may be driven by the Lazarus Group, a cybercrime mafia of North Korea.

Many members of the protocol’s team got an email having a PDF linked with it which the title of “New Salary Adjustments.” After you download that file and give information related to password may liberate virus on the computers, and as a result, the virus will transfer all the collected data of that computer to a hacker command office.” As per the details from the co-founder.

The hacking group Lazarus was ill-famed in the crypto industry after it hacked $550 million from Axie Infinity’s Ronin bridge. 

The founder of DeFinance Capital, Arthur Cheong, stated that the North Korean cybercriminal group Lazarus is the only group of hackers who are attacking the crypto industry. The founder has a strong belief that the well-known companies in the crypto space are at high risk. 

BlueNoroff is attacking cyber space.

Kaspersky, a cybersecurity company, has quoted the warning of Cheong and declared that one more group known as BlueNoroff is also attacking the crypto space.

Cybercriminals from North Korea have used virtual currencies in crypto virus attacks up against another division of the financial system. In July, the Justice Department of the United States got back $500,000 from North Korean cybercriminals who had pressurized two hospitals in the United States to give bribes in Bitcoin in order to get access to their servers back.

David Schewed opinion

The chief operating officer of Holborn, a blockchain security company, David Schewed, mentioned that these types of attacks are equitably common. It depends upon the challenging nature of the audience by naming the files anything that will annoy their interest, such as details related to their salary.

“We are facing many attacks of this type especially attacking blockchain firms given the raised stakes because of the changelessness of the blockchain payments,” Schwed further added.

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