Nick Percoco, CSO of Kraken Exchange tweeted that his team had successfully identified the $600M FTX hacker.
The CSO of Kraken Exchange, Nick Percoco, tweeted that the Kraken team now knows the user’s name who hacked FTX.
How Kraken was able to recognize it with ease
Since the hacker used the exchange to dump the stolen funds, Kraken’s KYC (Know Your Customer) mechanism was sufficient for the Kraken team to be able to identify the hacker. Mario Nawfal, the founder and CEO of IBCgroup.io, stated on Twitter that it is very likely that the hacker is an incompetent insider.
FTX “Hacker” just funded his TRX wallet from Kraken, according to a well-known YouTuber and supporter of cryptocurrencies and NFT named Satoshi Stacker.
Tobias Silver, the creator of just.money, was praised by Dyma Budorin, the CEO and co-founder of Hacken.io, for his exhaustive examination of the FTX Tron accounts.
Budorin came to the conclusion that an insider is responsible for (the FTX) rug pull or exit fraud due to the hacker’s incapacity. Kraken and law enforcement will presumably work together from this point on to find and find the identified person.
The FTX Hack Scandal Hours after the crypto exchange announced its intention to file for chapter 11 bankruptcy on a voluntary basis, reports of a $600 million hack started to circulate. Prior to the attack, Sam Bankman-Fried also submitted his resignation as CEO of the crypto exchange.
It added that there are about 130 more FTX-related entities who are parties to the proceedings. According to rumors, the defunct cryptocurrency exchange has lost almost $1 billion in client deposits, and it’s suspected that Bankman-Fried used a “backdoor” in the company’s accounting system to steal money in private.