#数字资产市场观察 In the past 12 months, a national-level Hacker group has siphoned off billions of dollars from the encryption industry, and the methods are chilling upon closer inspection. $BTC $ETH $BNB
The recent investigation by cybersecurity agency AhnLab sends shivers down the spine—these people love to disguise themselves as industry summit invitations or headhunter interview emails to trick you into opening attachments. Once you fall for it, your wallet is instantly emptied.
In February this year, a major exchange was robbed of 1.4 billion dollars, and 80% of the time it was probably them. Recently, a certain Korean platform lost 30 million dollars, and the industry is buzzing that it is inextricably linked to this gang. The level of professionalism of these people has reached a terrifying point for the entire industry.
The prevalence of AI technology has made the situation more complicated. Phishing emails nowadays look just like the real thing, making it nearly impossible to distinguish them with the naked eye. AhnLab's advice is quite practical: companies should implement multiple layers of firewalls, individuals should enable multi-factor authentication, avoid clicking on unknown links, and only download software from official websites. After all, today's hackers are much more cunning than you might think.
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BearEatsAll
· 3h ago
Damn, even national-level hackers are coming to snatch jobs, how desperate must that be.
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BlockImposter
· 3h ago
Billions of dollars just disappeared like that, I don't even dare to click on email attachments anymore.
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NFTregretter
· 3h ago
It's those people again. Fine, I have to think twice before looking at my emails now.
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NftDeepBreather
· 3h ago
Is it true that 1.4 billion dollars is just gone like that? The multi-layer firewall is useless, these people are smarter than AI.
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AirdropSweaterFan
· 3h ago
I really can't believe it, these days I don't even dare to open emails, who knows which is a real summit invitation and which is phishing.
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TommyTeacher
· 3h ago
Billions gone? I don't even dare to click on emails now, for fear that an invitation to some summit is a phishing attempt.
#数字资产市场观察 In the past 12 months, a national-level Hacker group has siphoned off billions of dollars from the encryption industry, and the methods are chilling upon closer inspection. $BTC $ETH $BNB
The recent investigation by cybersecurity agency AhnLab sends shivers down the spine—these people love to disguise themselves as industry summit invitations or headhunter interview emails to trick you into opening attachments. Once you fall for it, your wallet is instantly emptied.
In February this year, a major exchange was robbed of 1.4 billion dollars, and 80% of the time it was probably them. Recently, a certain Korean platform lost 30 million dollars, and the industry is buzzing that it is inextricably linked to this gang. The level of professionalism of these people has reached a terrifying point for the entire industry.
The prevalence of AI technology has made the situation more complicated. Phishing emails nowadays look just like the real thing, making it nearly impossible to distinguish them with the naked eye. AhnLab's advice is quite practical: companies should implement multiple layers of firewalls, individuals should enable multi-factor authentication, avoid clicking on unknown links, and only download software from official websites. After all, today's hackers are much more cunning than you might think.