đ°đľ North Korea's Lazarus Group behind Bybit's $1.4 billion hack.
ZachXBT reports these.
Lazarus is a state-backed North Korean hacking group
Theyâve stolen billions from banks, crypto exchanges, and DeFi protocols
And now, theyâve pulled off the biggest crypto heist in history
They just stole $1.46 billion from Bybit
And they didnât break the code â they broke the people.
There was no code exploit. No leaked private keys. Bybitâs own multisig signers approved the transactions. They thought they were signing a routine transfer. Instead, they were handing over their entire cold wallet...
But that raises a terrifying question.
How did Lazarus know exactly who to target?
A multisig wallet requires multiple signers.
If even one refused to sign, the hack would fail.
But they all signed.
That means Lazarus didnât just hack BybitâŚ
They knew who to manipulate
There are only a few ways to get that kind of information.
⢠Inside job â Someone leaked the signer list.
⢠Social engineering â Lazarus studied their emails & behavior.
⢠Device compromise â One or more signers were infected with malware.
This means other exchanges are at risk too...Yesterdat Lazarus stole 0.42% of all Ethereum
It means they own
More than the Ethereum Foundation.
More than Vitalik Buterin.
And more than Fidelity.
But laundering that much ETH without detection isnât easy...In previous attacks, Lazarus has used: ⢠Bridging to other blockchains ⢠On-chain mixing services ⢠OTC trading via illicit brokers Would they try the same tactics again? Obviously yes ...
Investigators quickly flagged the 53 wallets holding the stolen ETH.
Any attempt to cash out or swap funds would immediately raise red flags.
But Lazarus are in no hurry...In 2022, Chainalysis found Lazarus still held $55M from hacks six years earlier. They donât cash out fast. They wait. And no one has ever gotten their money back. Not once. Lazarus doesnât negotiate. They donât return funds. So what happens to users?
Bybitâs CEO, Ben Zhou, addressed the crisis publicly:
⢠âClient funds are 1:1 backed.â
⢠âWe have enough liquidity to cover withdrawals.â
⢠âAll other wallets remain secure.â
So far, no bank run...
But this isnât the first time this happened And it wonât be the last. So how do you stay safe? Follow these simple steps: