North Korea established a Blockchain company to launder money | AllFixs
Encrypting your link and protect the link from viruses, malware, thief, etc! Made your link safe to visit. Just Wait...
North Korea has used a blockchain company based in Hong Kong to launder money, according to a quarterly report from the United Nations Security Council's Sanctions Committee on North Korea.
According to the Korean newspaper Chosun, North Korea has hired a shipping and logistics company called Marine China, which operates on a blockchain platform, to avoid international sanctions by laundering stolen cryptocurrency.
The report claims a man named Julian Kim, with the alias Tony Walker, is the sole owner and investor in the company and has attempted to withdraw money from banks in Singapore on numerous occasions. Chosun said that the United Nations stated the money-laundering plan involved another (undisclosed) individual associated with the company, having circulated stolen crypto through more than 5,000 transactions in multiple countries. to disturb its origins.
News continues to be spread that the country has developed the 'spear-phishing' precision educational attacks. As a previous UN report said, over the past three years, 17 countries have been targeted by their hacking experts, resulting in more than $ 2 billion in damage - but North Korea has denied.
The report also noted the malicious code developed to move stolen BTC to a server located at Kim Nhat Thanh University, Chosun added.
Strict sanctions on North Korea from the UN and other international agencies have gradually pushed the country closer to cryptocurrencies. This September, Vice News announced the country was developing its own cryptocurrency with properties similar to BTC to evade international sanctions.
0 Response to "North Korea established a Blockchain company to launder money | AllFixs"
Post a Comment