The North Korean hacking group Lazarus has turned to a new crypto mixer named Sinbad, the blockchain analytics firm Elliptic has claimed.
Per an Elliptic post and a report from Yonhap, Larazrus is “affiliated with North Korea's Reconnaissance General Administration.” The United States and South Korea have blamed Lazarus and affiliated groups for multiple high-level crypto hacks.
Security providers and government agencies believe Pyongyang-linked groups have used coin mixers to anonymize transactions – allowing the North to build up a vast fortune in crypto. They claim this has been used to fund Pyongyang’s costly missile programs.
Blender was hit with sanctions by the US State Department last year. Washington claimed it was being used “to launder funds stolen by North Korea.” Blender shut down in April 2022, but some believe the service’s operator vanished with some $22 million worth of bitcoin (BTC).
But Elliptic claimed that Blender was now “back” – in a new guise.
The blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis also claimed North Korean hackers sent “more than $24 million to Sinbad,” Herald Kyungjae reported.
Coin mixers are services that are used to anonymize blockchain transactions. Using mixers makes it hard for instigators to trace a coin’s original sender.
If they are used repeatedly, it can become difficult to trace transactions. This makes it hard to see whether coins obtained illegally have been transferred elsewhere – or swapped for cash.
Elliptic claimed that Sinbad was released in “early October last year,” and claimed that despite its relatively small size, it was quickly put to use by Lazarus.
The firm claimed that to date, Lazarus has sent “tens of millions of dollars” been sent through Blender – and that it was
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