BBC: North Korean hackers cash out hundreds of millions from $1.5bn ByBit hack

The BBC reports of the recent successful hack and robbery of a huge value of Bitcoins, operated from North Korea and laundered through North Korea.
Again it shows that with support of a government, the crypto currencies can easily be hacked and misappropriated. With the help of a government that has allowed the build-up of a hacker team, it is evidently an easy thing to steal online anywhere on the World and launder and make disappear crypto currencies and to buy back cash.
Any governments could offer to criminal hackers a safe haven, therefore, it must be a consequence that crypto currencies shall not be considered as safe investments.
The electronically based accounting unit, which is the crypto currency, is all but safe – in particular, knowing that even the US can, with a finger’s snip, hack into a foreign adversary’s computer system to steal from or damage any crypto system.
The consequence must be: the crypto currencies shall not become legal and trusted means of value storage or investment. They may be allowed to survive on the fringe of the global financial system as an alternative payment or savings medium, such as any other asset type, but shall not become an officially accepted, government approved currency. And the risk shall remain fully with the investor.

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