A team at services company has been watching the erratic movements of the associated with
At 4:11 AM on May 8 the hacker or hackers moved 1214 ($7.16 million) to new addresses and then moved another 1337 “to 2 new addresses held by the hacker.”
This is the fourth major exchange hack of the year, following Cryptopia, DragonEx and Bithumb.
Image via Coinfirm
The hack took place at 5:15:24PM on May 7 when hackers dragged over 7,000 from a single hot into in a number of smaller in a single transaction. The hackers then moved small amounts into smaller wallets. Given the nature of the it’s easy to see where each is going but it is difficult to perform real forensics on the wallets in order to understand who – or what – created them.
According to analysis the hacker has recently moved over 1214 (~$7.16M) to new addresses
But almost 5786 (~$34.14M) still sit on the hackers original addresses
More exclusive insights coming!— Coinfirm (@Coinfirm_io)
The hacker just moved the funds again!
Coinfirm analysis shows 1227 of the funds moved to 2 new addresses held by the hacker(Red bubbles)
One holds 707 the other 520
Below is also a Coinfirm Risk Report of one
— Coinfirm (@Coinfirm_io)
The funds have moved again
— Coinfirm (@Coinfirm_io)
Why the brisk back and forth movement? Writer and analyst thinks the hackers are trying to erase their tracks.
“Money laundering 101: breaking the transactions up into smaller and smaller amounts making them more and more difficult to track,” she said.
Image via Coinfirm
Image via Shutterstock
Published at Wed, 08 May 2019 18:12:31 +0000