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U.S. Sanctions North Korean IT Workers Over ‘Cyber Espionage,’ Crypto Thefts

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The U.S. Treasury Department’s sanctions watchdog added North Korean national Song Kum Hyok to its «Specially Designated Nationals» list, alleging he is «a malicious cyber actor» tied to a North Korean hacking group.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control moved to block Song from the global financial system on Tuesday, arguing he worked to place other North Korean officials in various companies as IT workers. These IT workers would then send funds back to North Korea and, in some cases, find ways of exploiting the companies they worked for to generate additional revenue.

The crypto industry has been hard-hit by these types of schemes, with numerous major thefts taking place as a result of efforts by North Korean hackers.

«The DPRK generates significant revenue through the deployment of IT workers who fraudulently gain employment with companies around the world, including in the technology and virtual currency industries,» Tuesday’s release said.

Late last month, crypto investigator and analyst ZachXBT said «multiple projects … were exploited,» likely due to hiring North Korean IT workers as developers.

Though Tuesday’s Treasury Department release mentioned past hacks of crypto projects, it did not name any specific ones or include any crypto wallets in its sanctions list. It did note that the department had previously sanctioned the Lazarus Group, which investigators have tied to various crypto hacks across the past several years, including the $625 million theft from Axie Infinity and this year’s massive $1.5 billion hack of Bybit.

«DPRK IT workers often take on projects that involve virtual currency, and they use virtual currency exchanges and trading platforms to manage funds they receive for contract work as well as to launder and remit these funds to the DPRK,» the U.S. Treasury Department said Tuesday.

‘Illicit Revenue Generation’

Ari Redbord, the global head of policy and government affairs at TRM Labs, said the embedded IT workers «have served as on-ramps to both illicit revenue generation and eventual intrusion activity, particularly in the crypto space.»

«One notable aspect of today’s designation is the explicit reference to North Korean IT workers operating out of China and Russia,» he said, adding that this shows a «growing alignment» between the DPRK and certain jurisdictions.

«This action also fits into a broader pattern. In just the last month, Treasury has taken multiple steps targeting North Korea’s use of IT workers to funnel illicit proceeds back to Pyongyang often laundered through crypto exchanges and anonymized platforms,» he said.

«Song represents the operational layer behind those schemes: not the hacker, but the enabler. And that makes him just as important to disrupt. Building out networks has been a huge focus for Treasury over the last few months and this is another example of going after facilitators,» Redbord added

Read more: How North Korea Infiltrated the Crypto Industry

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Dan Tapiero Projects Crypto Economy Hitting $50T, Launches $500M Fund Under New Firm

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Well-known digital asset investor Dan Tapiero is merging private equity firms 10T Holdings and 1RoundTable Partners under a new brand 50T, reflecting his forecast that the digital asset ecosystem will reach a market value of $50 trillion in the next decade.

«50T is a natural evolution from our original thesis in 2020 when we launched 10T with the belief that the digital asset ecosystem would grow from $300 billion to $10 trillion in 10 years,» Tapiero said in a Tuesday press release.

«Today, we estimate that we’re already at $5 trillion, far exceeding our initial timeline, which is why we’re adjusting our outlook upward,» he said. «Recent successes like the Circle IPO and Deribit acquisition demonstrate the maturity of this sector and validate our investment thesis that all value will eventually move on-chain.»

USDC stablecoin issuer Circle surged nearly 10-fold from its initial price following its the stock market debut last month, while crypto exchange Coinbase acquired Deribit for $2.9 billion in May.

Funds under 50T were investors in Circle, Deribit, and digital trading platform Etoro, which also went public recently, and other portfolio companies are also gearing towards going public, the press release said.

50T is also launching a $500 million growth equity fund dubbed 50T Fund alongside the rebrand.

It’s a closed-end fund with a ten-year horizon, designed to back later-stage companies building out core infrastructure in blockchain and web3, with a first close planned in Q4 2025.

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SEC Approves, Immediately Pauses Bitwise’s Bid to Convert BITW Crypto Index Fund to ETF

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The Securities and Exchange Commission approved — then abruptly paused — Bitwise’s plan to convert its Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund (BITW) into a spot exchange-traded fund (ETF) on Tuesday, raising fresh uncertainty around the agency’s standards for crypto ETFs.

The fund holds 90% of its weight in bitcoin (BTC) and ether (ETH), with the remainder spread across Solana (SOL), XRP, Cardano (ADA), Avalanche (AVAX), Chainlink (LINK), Bitcoin Cash (BCH), Uniswap (UNI) and Polkadot (DOT). It manages $1.68 billion in assets and rebalances monthly.

Bitwise launched the fund in 2017. The 2.5% expense ratio remains steep by ETF standards, but the conversion to a spot ETF would make BITW the first multi-asset crypto index ETF in the U.S. — if it proceeds. The asset manager has not yet disclosed if the management fee would stay at 2.5%.

A similar product, Grayscale’s Digital Large Cap Fund (GDLC), which tracks BTC, ETH, XRP, SOL and ADA, also received initial SEC approval before the agency reversed course, pausing the fund’s launch.

A letter from the SEC on Tuesday said «the Commission will review the delegated action,» identical wording to the letter Grayscale received when its ETF was paused.

According to sources who spoke to CoinDesk at the time, the SEC’s hesitation likely stems from the need to establish consistent standards for crypto ETFs, particularly for tokens like XRP and ADA that do not yet have standalone ETFs.

The SEC’s ETF docket has been busy. On Tuesday, the regulator published filings from Franklin Templeton, Fidelity, Invesco Galaxy, and others seeking to amend redemption mechanics for their Bitcoin and/or Ethereum ETFs. It also launched a review of the Canary Capital SUI ETF and extended the deadline on 21Shares’ SUI ETF application.

Separately, 21Shares filed a proposal for an ETF tracking ONDO, the token powering real-world asset platform Ondo Finance.

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Ethereum Validator Exit Queue Nears $2B as Stakers Rush to Exit After 160% Rally

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Ethereum’s validator exit queue swelled on Tuesday to its longest wait time in more than a year, that could signal a rush among stakers to pull funds after a major price rally in ether (ETH).

There was nearly 519,000 ETH as of Tuesday U.S. afternoon, worth $1.92 billion at current prices, in line to exit the network, data by validatorqueue.com shows.

That the largest amount in the exit queue since January 2024, extending withdrawal delays to over 9 days, per the data source.

ETH validator exit queue (validatorqueue.com)

The congestion is due to the dynamics of Ethereum’s proof-of-stake model, which limits how quickly validators can join or leave the network. Validators are entities that stake tokens to help secure the blockchain in return for a reward.

Profit-taking after ETH rally

The ongoing exodus is likely due to profit-taking by those who staked ETH at much lower prices and now cashing out after ETH rallied 160% from the early April trough.

«When prices go up, people unstake and sell to lock in profits,» said Andy Cronk, co-founder of staking service provider Figment. «We’ve seen this pattern for retail and institutional levels through many cycles.» He also added unstaking spikes could also happen when large institutions move custodians or change their wallet tech.

Notably, there was a surge of validators entering the network during March and early April, a period when ETH traded between $1,500 and $2,000.

Number of active Ethereum validators (validatorqueue.com)

ETH staking demand also soars

Despite the wave of tokens being unstaked, a large sell pressure may not materialize as there’s a consistent demand to stake tokens and activate new validators.

There’s over 357,000 ETH, worth $1.3 billion, waiting to enter the network, stretching the entry queue beyond six days, its longest since April 2024.

Behind this opposite dynamics could be «a mix of older stakers capturing profit as well as stakers shifting to a treasury strategy,» said David Shuttleworth, partner at Anagram.

Indeed, some of this fresh demand may have come from the new wave of ETH corporate treasuries such as Sharplink Gaming, which has acquired over $1.3 billion in ETH since its pivot in late May and staked tokens as part of its strategy.

Also, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) clarified on May 29 that staking does not violate U.S. securities laws, which bolstered institutional appetite.

Underscoring the trend, the number of active validators grew 54,000 since late May to reach a record high of nearly 1.1 million, per validatorqueue.com.

«Since the SEC provided guidance on staking in May, Figment has seen a more than 100% increase in Ethereum staking delegations from institutions and a more than 360%+ increase in Ethereum queue times, which is inline with the price increases we’ve seen in ETH,» Cronk told CoinDesk.

Read more: Institutions Are Driving Ethereum’s ‘Comeback’

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