south korean prosecutors say they just regained control of about 320.88 bitcoin that had gone missing from government custody. at recent prices that’s roughly $20m+ worth of btc, showing up back in an official wallet.

    the backstory is the uncomfortable part. these were seized assets held in a cold wallet. investigators believe access credentials were exposed through a phishing incident when the wallet setup touched a compromised site/device. the coins were later found missing during an internal review, and the hacker stayed unidentified.

    so why would anyone return stolen btc if onchain transfers can’t be “chargebacked”?

    because “irreversible” doesn’t mean “easy to cash out.” prosecutors say they asked exchanges to freeze wallets tied to the theft. if you can’t liquidate, you’re sitting on a very traceable asset with a growing risk of getting caught. returning it can be the least bad option.

    south korea lost 320 btc to a phishing screwup. then the hacker sent it back. that’s the real “crypto isn’t reversible” lesson
    byu/hodorrny inCryptoMarkets



    Posted by hodorrny

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