Marktkapitalisierung
24h Vol
10071
Kryptowährungen
58.26%
Bitcoin Aktie

ZachXBT links LiFi volume surge to DPRK laundering post-Bybit hack

ZachXBT links LiFi volume surge to DPRK laundering post-Bybit hack


crypto.news
2025-06-03 12:51:33

A blockchain investigator suggested that crypto laundering by North Korean hackers may account for 15–25% of LiFi activity. LiFi Protocol reported its highest activity figures yet. However, blockchain investigator ZachXBT suggested that much of the cross-chain bridge’s volume was tied to North Korean hackers laundering funds from the Bybit hack. On Tuesday, June 3, ZachXBT highlighted LiFi Protocol’s record-breaking performance. The protocol’s founder, Arjun Chand, shared May data showing $3 billion in volume and 4.37 million executed transactions. Additionally, he claimed that over 510,000 unique users were served. You might also like: Bybit’s billion-dollar hack has changed everything — Ethereum rollback, CZ’s warning, and a liquidity miracle ZachXBT noted that the founder did not address the likely reason behind the significant surge in activity. According to the investigator, the primary driver was money laundering linked to recent North Korean hacks. “Fun fact: Whenever your favorite cross-chain bridge flexes record usage/volume stats for the month, there’s a high likelihood the activity came from DPRK laundering funds from hacks,” ZachXBT. You might also like: Bybit’s $1.5B heist: How Park Jin Hyok became crypto’s most feared cybercriminal North Korean hackers launder half of Bybit’s money The investigator explained that the apparent spike in network volume likely came from laundering related to the Bybit hack. These hackers employ complex operations designed to obscure the source of funds, which substantially increases network activity. “Usage gets overstated because they repeatedly chain hop back and forth to obfuscate movements,” ZachXBT claimed. He added that “DPRK represented at minimum 15-25% of LiFi activity during the period of time.” While blockchain transactions are technically transparent, several laundering tactics can obscure their origin. These include frequent chain-hopping, token swaps, and splitting funds across thousands of wallets—practices that make tracing nearly impossible. The Bybit hackers appear to have succeeded in their efforts. By the end of May, over half of the $1.4 billion in stolen funds were reportedly untraceable on-chain, indicating they had been successfully laundered. Read more: ‘We can’t defeat an enemy that we don’t know’: Researcher warns of North Korea’s changing crypto tactics


Lesen Sie den Haftungsausschluss : Alle hierin bereitgestellten Inhalte unserer Website, Hyperlinks, zugehörige Anwendungen, Foren, Blogs, Social-Media-Konten und andere Plattformen („Website“) dienen ausschließlich Ihrer allgemeinen Information und werden aus Quellen Dritter bezogen. Wir geben keinerlei Garantien in Bezug auf unseren Inhalt, einschließlich, aber nicht beschränkt auf Genauigkeit und Aktualität. Kein Teil der Inhalte, die wir zur Verfügung stellen, stellt Finanzberatung, Rechtsberatung oder eine andere Form der Beratung dar, die für Ihr spezifisches Vertrauen zu irgendeinem Zweck bestimmt ist. Die Verwendung oder das Vertrauen in unsere Inhalte erfolgt ausschließlich auf eigenes Risiko und Ermessen. Sie sollten Ihre eigenen Untersuchungen durchführen, unsere Inhalte prüfen, analysieren und überprüfen, bevor Sie sich darauf verlassen. Der Handel ist eine sehr riskante Aktivität, die zu erheblichen Verlusten führen kann. Konsultieren Sie daher Ihren Finanzberater, bevor Sie eine Entscheidung treffen. Kein Inhalt unserer Website ist als Aufforderung oder Angebot zu verstehen