It stole cryptocurrency worth billions of won», said Kim Byung - kee, member of South Korea's
parliamentary Intelligence Committee, quoted by Reuters.
Kim Byung - kee, of South Korea's
parliamentary intelligence committee, said, «North Korea sent emails that could be used to hack into cryptocurrency exchanges and their customers» private information, and stole funds worth billions of Korean won [millions of US dollars].»
Kim Byung - kee, a member of South Korea's
parliamentary intelligence committee, said this week that North Korea stole cryptocurrency worth billions of South Korean Won (millions in U.S. dollars) over the course of the last year, mostly stolen through phishing campaigns.
As reported by Reuters, Kim Byung - kee, a member of South Korea's
parliamentary intelligence committee, claims the North has been able to steal cryptocurrency from the country by way of phishing campaigns.
«North Korea sent emails that could hack into cryptocurrency exchanges and their customers» private information and stole (cryptocurrency) worth billions of won,» said Kim Byung - kee, a member of South Korea's
parliamentary intelligence committee.
This message was brought home clearly earlier this year in Asia when on February 6, the South Korean Intelligence Agency reported to
the Parliamentary Intelligence Committee that it deemed North Korea responsible for the hacking of the Japanese Bitcoin exchange centre.
Not exact matches
The Trudeau government will set up a
parliamentary committee to oversee all security and
intelligence activities.
Artificial
intelligence brings opportunity but must be treated ethically, a bishop on a
parliamentary committee on AI has told Premier.
The
intelligence and security
committee is the only
parliamentary committee, whose members are nominated directly by the prime minister, with Conservative MP Malcolm Rifkind the current chair.
He proposed oversight should be done by a sub-
committee of the Commons defence
committee, with members given high - level security clearance, rather than by the
parliamentary intelligence and security
committee.
Will Malcolm Rifkind stand down as chair of
parliamentary security and
intelligence committee?
Senior Labour MP John Mann took to Twitter and called for Sir Malcolm to step down as Chair of the
Parliamentary Intelligence and Security
committee following the disclosures:
The programme, which aired on 23 February, and Telegraph articles led Straw to suspend himself from the
parliamentary Labour party and Rifkind to step down as the chairman of parliament's
intelligence and security
committee and as an MP.
He was also counsel for the Security
Intelligence Review
Committee and the Canadian
Parliamentary Press Gallery