The total value of cryptocurrency stolen in 2024 increased by 21% and reached $2.2 billion. More than half of this amount was stolen by cybercriminals allegedly associated with the DPRK, according to a Chainalysis report.
Between 2017 and 2023, North Korean hackers stole $3 billion in cryptocurrency assets, the UN Security Council reported. In 2024, cybercriminals from this country accounted for 61% of the total amount of stolen assets – $1.34 billion and 47 incidents, Chainalysis said. Most of the hacks that led to the theft of cryptocurrencies occurred between January and July of this year – the amount of funds stolen during this time exceeded $1.58 billion, which is 84.4% more than in the same period a year earlier. Since July, such incidents began to occur much less frequently, which experts correlated with changes in the geopolitical situation related to the DPRK.
Over the past decade, annual cryptocurrency thefts have exceeded a billion dollars four times: in 2018 ($1.5 billion), 2021 ($3.3 billion), 2022 ($3.7 billion) and 2023 ($1.8 billion). Decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms seem to be the most vulnerable – over the past three years, services with insufficient protection have become the most frequent targets of attacks; They enjoyed the greatest “popularity” among hackers in the first quarter of 2024, and in the second and third quarters, cybercriminals switched to centralized platforms.
The most high-profile cases of attacks on centralized services this year were the hacks of the Japanese crypto exchange DMM Bitcoin, which lost $305 million as a result of the incident, and the Indian WazirX, which suspended the withdrawal of funds after hacking its security system in July.
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