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Monero Confirms Ledger Wallet Support is Ready to Go

Monero confirms ledger wallet support is ready to go

Monero Confirms Ledger Wallet Support is Ready to Go

Monero confirms ledger wallet support is ready to go

Wilma Woo · April 11, 2018 · 8:30 am

Privacy-focused altcoin Monero (XMR) is set to receive official support from cryptocurrency hardware wallet manufacturer Ledger, lead code maintainer Riccardo Spagni has confirmed.


Monero 0.12.1 Means ‘Official Ledger Support’

Speaking in an interview during an episode of the Doug Polk Podcast April 9, Spagni added the integration had “already” occurred.

“We are on Ledger already if you’ve got the dev kit,” he said. “I saw some commits happening today to fix a couple of small issues… I’d hope that probably alongside the Monero 0.12.1 release, there will be official Ledger support.”

Spagni had also demonstrated the dev kit progress on social media March 30.

The announcement comes just a week after Monero hard forked in a move designed to protect the network from certain kinds of ASIC mining.

Spagni had previously pledged to “do everything in his power” to allow small, individual miners to continue mining the coin, with pro-ASIC parties subsequently debuting a host of alternative Monero forks on the market.

Among these are Monero Original and Monero Classic, Google Trends currently showing considerable interest among speculators eager to cash in on trading.

XMR price has yet to feel a knock-on effect from the Ledger hook-up meanwhile, maintaining flat performance in previous days and gaining 0.5% April 11 to average $166 on major exchanges.

bitcoin Cash Breaks Ledger

Meanwhile, Ledger experienced a temporary “outage” of its infrastructure supporting fellow altcoin bitcoin Cash April 10 after a node update killed compatibility.

Over a period of around 48 hours from April 9 – 11, users faced seeing incorrect balances on their devices, Ledger nonetheless reassuring them that funds remained safe.

“The new version of bitcoin-ABC (bitcoin Cash node) breaks compatibility with our parser. As a result balances shown on the Ledger Wallet are incorrect,” the ongoing active incident report reports.

Our engineering team is currently working on a fix. Funds stay secured and you can safely receive transactions.

The effects of the incident are expected to be fully patched by 14:00 CET April 11.

What do you think about Monero being added to Ledger? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of Shutterstock, Twitter

bitcoin cashledgermoneroRiccardo SpagniXMR Show comments

Published at Wed, 11 Apr 2018 12:30:53 +0000

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North Korea Trying to Hack Bitcoin Exchanges

In a desperate bid for financial resources, North Korea and Kim Jong-un are unleashing hackers against bitcoin exchanges.


The continuing rise in bitcoin value has had a lot of positive effects. People have made a lot of money on the cryptocurrency’s rise, and the accompanying headlines have brought more people into the crypto world. However, there is a downside to bitcoin skyrocketing in value, which is having unsavory characters trying to get their hands on it through illegal means. One of the more notable black hats in this regard is Kim Jong-un and North Korea, who security experts say are targeting Bitcoin exchanges due to the digital currency’s increased demand.

Targeting bitcoin

North Korea used to focus their cyber espionage on traditional state activities. That all began to change in 2016, when the cyber security company FireEye began to note that North Korea began to target banks and the global financial system. 2017 has seen several attacks against South Korean cryptocurrency exchanges, and this activity has since spread to banking groups in Europe and South Korea, bitcoin exchanges, and even an ATM company.

Independent security expert Ashley Shen notes:

We assume one of the reasons why bitcoin is being attacked is because the price keeps increasing and we think it’s reasonable for hackers (to target). Digital currency might be easier to gain than physical currency. So I think it’s reasonable.

Security experts have followed attacks by various hacking groups, such as Andariel, Lazarus, and Bluenoroff, and these groups are suspected to be front groups for North Korea.

Shen adds:

Before when we tracked nation-state attackers, they usually perform cyber attacks which are aimed at confidential data and intelligence. However recently we’ve discovered that some of the APT (Advanced Persistent Threat) groups are trying to hack financial institutions like banks and bitcoin exchanges to gain financial profit.

North Korea Needs Money

While North Korea always seems to be up to some mischief, these ongoing attacks against bitcoin exchanges is likely a sign of desperation. The country has been isolated due to crippling sanctions, and those sanctions were recently further enhanced by the Trump administration.

In late November, the US government targeted 13 companies, 20 vessels, and 1 individual for engaging in trade with North Korea, At that time, US Treasure Secretary Steven Mnuchin stated:

As North Korea continues to threaten international peace and security, we are steadfast in our determination to maximize economic pressure to isolate it from outside sources of trade and revenue while exposing its evasive tactics.

Overall, the already meager North Korean economy has been crippled by economic sanctions. So it comes as no surprise that they wish to hack into bitcoin exchanges in an effort to steal bitcoins as the cryptocurrency surges in value. Ashley Shen believes that such attacks are not going away any time soon, saying:

My own opinion is they will probably keep doing the Bitcoins because the price keeps increasing and it’s a good investment… So I assume they will do more bitcoin attacks and of course they will keep targeting banks because that’s what they did before.

Are you worried about North Korea hacking into bitcoin exchanges? Let us know in the comments below.


Images courtesy of Pixabay and Bitcoinist archives.

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