China Accuses U.S. of $13 Billion Bitcoin Mining Pool Hack
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China’s national cyber defense agency has made big claims around the alleged role of the US in the multibillion-dollar hack of LuBian, once a major Chinese Bitcoin mining pool. The Chinese National Computer Virus Emergency Response Center (CVERC),
Credit: Getty / Andriy Onufriyenko The China National Computer Virus Emergency Response Center (CVERC), Beijing’s primary cybersecurity agency, has accused Washington of stealing 127,272 Bitcoin — worth more than $13 billion USD at today’s exchange rate — in a December 2020 hack.
Current and former federal officials tell Information Security Media Group furloughs and leadership gaps across the federal cyber ecosystem have hindered the U.S.
Bybit’s new report pulls back the curtain on one of blockchain’s most controversial powers — the ability to freeze user funds. What started as an emergency
China accuses the U.S. of a $13B Bitcoin hack from LuBian mining pool, sparking global crypto tensions and diplomatic disputes.
Just about every jurisdiction measures them differently. The data should differentiate between life-and-death situations and less serious ones. Doing so could save lives — including those of first responders.