Kraken Thwarts North Korean Hacker Posing as Job Applicant
By: financefeeds|2025/05/02 16:30:02
0
Share
U.S.-based crypto exchange Kraken revealed that it uncovered and blocked a North Korean hacking attempt disguised as a job application for an engineering role. The scheme was detailed in a blog post on Wednesday and shows the increasing use of social engineering and insider threats by state-backed cybercriminals targeting the crypto industry. According to Kraken, the red flags emerged early in the interview process when the candidate used a different name than the one on their application and intermittently switched voices during the call—suggesting someone was coaching them live. Rather than cutting the process short, Kraken advanced the applicant through additional stages to collect intelligence on the hacker’s methods. The exchange later confirmed the applicant’s email matched a known address linked to North Korea’s cyber units , which had been flagged by industry partners sharing intelligence on ongoing threats. The investigation revealed a broader network of fake identities used by the hacker to apply to several firms, including signs of manipulated ID documents, a resume tied to a GitHub profile linked to an exposed email, and suspicious login behavior involving VPNs and remote Mac desktops. In the final round of interviews, Kraken’s chief security officer, Nick Percoco, ran a series of identity verification traps that the applicant failed, confirming the person behind the screen was not who they claimed to be. The individual’s ID appeared to contain details lifted from a previous identity theft case. “This wasn’t just a fake candidate—it was a coordinated attempt to get inside a crypto company,” said Percoco. “In today’s environment, the old rules don’t apply. Trust has to be earned—and verified.” The attempted breach follows warnings from U.S., Japanese, and South Korean authorities that North Korea has been actively embedding IT workers in blockchain and crypto firms to exfiltrate funds or intelligence. Lazarus Group , a notorious North Korean hacking collective, was blamed for February’s record-breaking $1.4 billion Bybit hack and several others totaling over $650 million in 2024 alone.
You may also like
Is the Storage Cycle Peaking? Here’s a 'Fundamental Psychological Massage' from Bank of America
Upbit operator Dunamu wins bid for South Korea police crypto custody contract
Bitcoin is not a stock, nor a company, but a monetary asset
ADI's Hidden Victory: From World Cup Entry to Traditional Financial Ecosystem
What Are the Best Metals for Investment Besides Gold?
Odaily Editorial Team Tea Talk (July 8)
Controversy Surrounding Huawei's Prodigy Li Bojie and His DeepSeek Interview Experience Amid Web3 Investor Backlash
SemiAnalysis: Anthropic's Q3 Profit Expected to Exceed $1 Billion
Anthropic is quietly disrupting the AI commercial landscape. With the explosive popularity of Claude Code, its ARR has surged from $9 billion to over $60 billion in a single quarter, with API business gross margins exceeding 80% and net revenue retention rates reaching 500%. Research firm SemiAnalys...
From 'Never Sell Bitcoin' to Active Management: How is Strategy Coping with $1.26 Billion Annual Dividend Pressure?
Leverage Products Trigger Major Changes in Stock Market: How Did the South Korean Market Become a 'Casino'?
Bernstein Analysis: Memory Prices Are Still Rising, But Phones and PCs Can't Keep Up
Satoshi Bitcoin lawsuit drops 44 wallets after on-chain activity
Upcoming Auction of Token FOLD: What is The Interfold Supported by Vitalik?
The Demystification of AI Collaboration Tools: Is Organizing Reports and Checking Spreadsheets the Most Common Scenario?
Goldman Sachs Trading Desk: The Sell-off of Momentum Stocks in the U.S. is Fierce, Unseen Since 2020! But No 'Panic' Yet, Retail Investors are the Biggest Support
Collateral USD: How does the "second layer dollar" above stablecoins form?
Under the reference framework of the offshore dollar system, once stablecoins are incorporated into the collateral financing chain, it may give rise to a new type of dollar debt based on them—“collateralized dollars.” Whether this layer of debt can be established and whether it is stable depends on ...
How has the Pacific "fever" turned extreme weather into a cash machine for Wall Street?
The extreme weather caused by El Niño is sweeping through the commodity markets, becoming not only a "weather code" for quantitative funds and traders to frantically profit from, but also quietly driving up global food prices and the cost of living for ordinary people.
Trade Spot Market Orders With More Control: WEEX Adds Slippage Tolerance
WEEX Spot now supports Slippage tolerance for market orders, helping users set a maximum acceptable price deviation before placing a market buy or sell order
Is the Storage Cycle Peaking? Here’s a 'Fundamental Psychological Massage' from Bank of America
Upbit operator Dunamu wins bid for South Korea police crypto custody contract
Bitcoin is not a stock, nor a company, but a monetary asset
ADI's Hidden Victory: From World Cup Entry to Traditional Financial Ecosystem
What Are the Best Metals for Investment Besides Gold?
Odaily Editorial Team Tea Talk (July 8)
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com
