cadamsdotcom 9 minutes ago

Crypto is still in the “bank heist” era.

The tech needs surrounding infrastructure built (or plugged in) - not technical but physical. Stuff like recourse mechanisms for mistakes; courts; and prisons.

Once that’s done it’ll end up almost indistinguishable from what we already have.

torlok 3 hours ago

The narrative that this is a Lazarus Group hack is being pushed hard. The only connection is that the same wallet was used as in the Phemex hack, which is only speculated to have been done by the Lazarus Group. Bybit is stationed in Dubai, but it's a Singaporean company, just like Phemex. Observing crypto from afar, it's so baffling how people just accept these supposed hacks, and nothing ever comes out of it.

  • baobun an hour ago

    Right. In current environment it would certainly behoove any other attacker to associate themselves with assumed DPRK entities. Why not take inspiration of their laundering patterns and "donate" some fraction of the bounty to their wallets as cover?

    Pinning things on Lazarus is in interest of US agencies, the victim themselves, and industry media.

timeflex 3 hours ago

Always the same lousy explanations. Right before FTX went under, they were investors in the Switchboard oracle who was only utilizing pricing data from FTX & potentially one other exchange in the $112 million Mango Markets hack. When are people going to stop accepting North Korea stole your money, we're innocent?

  • jay-barronville an hour ago

    > When are people going to stop accepting North Korea stole your money, we're innocent?

    What are you suggesting here? Can you elaborate?

    • ordinaryradical an hour ago

      It’s easier to steal your own customers’ money than for someone to break in.

      I don’t know if it’s exactly Occam’s Razor that “hacks” would originate from within the institutions compromised, but in crypto world the incentives are nuts and the ability to obfuscate bad behavior is extreme.

TMWNN 3 hours ago

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