Security News > 2022 > July > U.S. doubles reward for tips on North Korean-backed hackers
"If you have information on any individuals associated with the North Korean government-linked malicious cyber groups and who are involved in targeting U.S. critical infrastructure in violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, you may be eligible for a reward," the Department revealed Tuesday.
One month later, the FBI linked the largest crypto hack ever to two North Korean hacking groups, Lazarus and BlueNorOff, saying they were responsible for the theft of $620 million in Ethereum from Axie Infinity's Ronin network bridge.
Two years ago, in April 2020, the U.S. government issued guidance on North Korean hacking activity in a joint advisory published by the U.S. Department of State, Treasury, Homeland Security, and the FBI. At the time, the State Department added in a DPRK Cyber Threat Advisory that it would reward any tips on North Korean hackers' cyber activity with up to $5 million if it leads to their identification or location or the disruption of DPRK-related illicit activities.
In 2019, the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned three North Korean hacking groups for funneling financial assets they stole in cyberattacks to the North Korean government.
A confidential United Nations report also revealed the same year that North Korean state hackers had stolen an estimated $2 billion in dozens of cyberattacks targeting banks and crypto exchanges worldwide.
Additional information regarding North Korean malicious activity in the form of previous alerts released through the U.S. National Cyber Awareness System is available here.
News URL
Related news
- North Korean Hackers Using New VeilShell Backdoor in Stealthy Cyber Attacks (source)
- North Korean govt hackers linked to Play ransomware attack (source)
- North Korean hackers pave the way for Play ransomware (source)
- North Korean hackers employ new tactics to compromise crypto-related businesses (source)
- North Korean Hackers Target Crypto Firms with Hidden Risk Malware on macOS (source)
- North Korean hackers use new macOS malware against crypto firms (source)
- North Korean Hackers Target macOS Using Flutter-Embedded Malware (source)
- North Korean hackers create Flutter apps to bypass macOS security (source)