The Bitcoin Bubble

APOPHIS

Autodidact / Polymath
Platinum Member
I’m not surprised one bit. Glad I didn’t listen to the naysayers, and props to @malaki , but what do I know, I’m “just a troll” (according to the most low-quality posters on the site) :lol:

Haha yeah bruh we like to learn the hard way.
Some of us have more time to rash on others than getting this money.
 

APOPHIS

Autodidact / Polymath
Platinum Member
Really it's not too late, I mean another coin in 10 years can be just as much as bitcoin. The first in anything rarely remains king.


Yep.
I've been hunting for small cap gems on Uniswap and BSC.
Polkabridge got my serious attention.
 

darth frosty

Dark Lord of the Sith
BGOL Investor
Eukx4l8VIAQi5Yb
 

xfactor

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Haha yeah bruh we like to learn the hard way.
Some of us have more time to rash on others than getting this money.
That’s why I got nothing but time now, especially during COVID, and try to give back because of what I learned (and still am learning, especially branching more into app development, fintech and AI/ML utilization) but it is hard to share knowledge with all these pro-whites that have infiltrated the board. I have no respect for trash.

And I think there is a coin that will eventually get to 4-5 figures. If so, my descendants are perpetually set financially.
 

doe moe

Rising Star
Platinum Member
Whatever you use to access your bitcoin, make sure that device or app is updated.

North Korean hackers on the hunt for coins.



CISA, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Department of the Treasury have released a Joint Cybersecurity Advisory and seven Malware Analysis Reports (MARs) on the North Korean government’s dissemination of malware that facilitates the theft of cryptocurrency—referred to by the U.S. Government as “AppleJeus.

This joint advisory is the result of analytic efforts among the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Department of Treasury (Treasury) to highlight the cyber threat to cryptocurrency posed by North Korea, formally known as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), and provide mitigation recommendations. Working with U.S. government partners, FBI, CISA, and Treasury assess that Lazarus Group—which these agencies attribute to North Korean state-sponsored advanced persistent threat (APT) actors—is targeting individuals and companies, including cryptocurrency exchanges and financial service companies, through the dissemination of cryptocurrency trading applications that have been modified to include malware that facilitates theft of cryptocurrency.

These cyber actors have targeted organizations for cryptocurrency theft in over 30 countries during the past year alone. It is likely that these actors view modified cryptocurrency trading applications as a means to circumvent international sanctions on North Korea—the applications enable them to gain entry into companies that conduct cryptocurrency transactions and steal cryptocurrency from victim accounts. As highlighted in FASTCash 2.0: North Korea's BeagleBoyz Robbing Banks and Guidance on the North Korean Cyber Threat, North Korea’s state-sponsored cyber actors are targeting cryptocurrency exchanges and accounts to steal and launder hundreds of millions of dollars in cryptocurrency.[1][2][3] The U.S. Government refers to malicious cyber activity by the North Korean government as HIDDEN COBRA. For more information on HIDDEN COBRA activity, visit https://www.us-cert.cisa.gov/northkorea.

The U.S. Government has identified malware and indicators of compromise (IOCs) used by the North Korean government to facilitate cryptocurrency thefts; the cybersecurity community refers to this activity as “AppleJeus.” This report catalogues AppleJeus malware in detail. North Korea has used AppleJeus malware posing as cryptocurrency trading platforms since at least 2018. In most instances, the malicious application—seen on both Windows and Mac operating systems—appears to be from a legitimate cryptocurrency trading company, thus fooling individuals into downloading it as a third-party application from a website that seems legitimate. In addition to infecting victims through legitimate-looking websites, HIDDEN COBRA actors also use phishing, social networking, and social engineering techniques to lure users into downloading the malware.
 

mrcmd187

Controversy Creates Cash
BGOL Investor
I remember being laughed at and told I was a fool when I started investing in Bitcoin but this also came from a fool who invested heavily in the housing market. Guess who is laughing now.
 

easy_b

Easy_b is in the place to be.
BGOL Investor
I missed the boat on this I was very apprehensive I am still a little apprehensive but it is what it is
 

Basetip

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I mean he could have bought bitcoin with his earnings.
What was the benefit?
If it's all Guaranteed YOU ARE RIGHT.... but, If it's not all guaranteed, lets say he got $20m(690 btc @ $29k per 01Jan2021) that they have on the books for him at the time of signing(he's obviously a beleiver in BTC).... now here we are 01Apr2021 his 690 btc of non guaranteed money (but on the books at the time) are now worth $40.5m(690 btc @ $58.8k per 01Apr2021) and still gaining depending on the market... now if he took regular dollars, they only holding $20m for him... smart move, but you gotta believe.
 
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