Atomic Wallet Freezes 'Suspicious Deposits' Totalling $2M on Exchanges
In a concerted effort led by Atomic Wallet, with the participation of forensic experts and centralised exchanges, a sum of $2 million suspicious deposits have been frozen.

In a concerted effort led by Atomic Wallet, with the participation of forensic experts and centralised exchanges, a sum of $2 million suspicious deposits have been frozen.
The class-action lawsuit, a unified effort by around 50 affected investors, directs its focus on Atomic Wallet's response to the security incident.
The removal of its iOS and Chrome Extension wallets from the market is scheduled for November 1, 2023, although customers will still be able to access their wallets until October 1.
The attackers are believed to be the infamous North Korean hacker group Lazarus, as per blockchain security firm Elliptic.
Before moving the stolen funds to Garantex, the hackers used the on-chain trading platform 1inch to exchange the assets for USDT.
Atomic Wallet has joined the growing list of hack incidents in crypto and DeFi protocols this year.
Customers of Atomic Wallet fell victim to a massive cryptocurrency heist over the weekend, resulting in the loss of millions of dollars.
Deaton has revealed reasons why Judge Torres holds back on ruling the lawsuit.
Contrary to certain rumors, Trust says user funds cannot be pilfered by merely taking a picture of its wallet’s screen.
As per the details from a tweet thread by Coinbase, iOS users will be unable to send NFTs from their wallets on iOS devices anymore.