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North Korean hackers have stolen billions in crypto by posing as VCs, recruiters and IT workers

A venture capitalist, a recruiter from a big company, and a newly hired remote IT worker might not seem to have much in common, but all have been caught as imposters secretly working for the North Korean regime, according to security researchers. On Friday at Cyberwarcon, an annual conference in Washington DC focused on disruptive threats in cyberspace, security researchers offered their most up-to-date assessment of the threat from North Korea. The researchers warned of a sustained attempt by the country's hackers to pose as prospective employees seeking work at multinational corporations, with the aim of earning money for the North Korean regime and stealing corporate secrets that benefit its weapons program.

Is Trump Media Going to Acquire a Cryptocurrency Trading Business? Here's What That Could Mean for the Stock.

Trump Media & Technology Group (NASDAQ: DJT) isn't profitable or generating much revenue, but the one thing it does have is cash, and it could soon put that to work. What is Bakkt Holdings? Earlier this year, the struggling stock also completed a 1-for-25 reverse stock split to help prop up its value and stay above the $1 needed to remain listed on the New York Stock Exchange.