The post North Korea’s AI Hackers Redefine Crypto Crime in 2025 appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
North Korea’s hackers have found a new weapon — and it’s not quantum computing.
In 2025 alone, state-sponsored groups like the Lazarus Group have stolen more than $2 billion in cryptocurrency, using artificial intelligence to supercharge every stage of their operations. AI now scans thousands of smart contracts in minutes, identifies exploitable code, and automates multi-chain attacks once limited to elite cyber teams.
AI at the Core of Modern Crypto Heists
The record-breaking $1.5 billion Bybit hack in February 2025 marked a turning point. Investigators from Elliptic and TRM Labs say North Korean hackers used AI-driven reconnaissance tools and deepfake recruiter profiles to infiltrate internal systems. Once inside, AI algorithms detected weaknesses, executed exploits, and routed stolen funds through Tron-based mixers and over-the-counter brokers, masking their trail with near-machine precision.
Cybersecurity experts note that AI now handles the entire attack lifecycle — from writing malicious code to generating phishing lures and managing laundering paths. As one analyst at Mysten Labs put it,
“Large language models have made cybercrime scalable even small teams can now operate like industrial-scale hackers.”
Quantum Computing Isn’t the Immediate Threat
While quantum computing remains a long-term risk, no existing system can yet break Bitcoin’s ECDSA encryption. Experts estimate it will take a decade or more before quantum decryption becomes realistic. The immediate challenge, they say, is defending against adaptive AI models that evolve faster than traditional security protocols.
Also Read : Crypto Hacks Surge in 2025: $2.1 Billion Stolen in Just 6 Months ,
Industry Adapts to AI-Driven Threats
Exchanges and DeFi projects are now urged to run continuous, AI-aware security audits that scan for vulnerabilities as fast as attackers do. Firms like Elliptic, Chainalysis, and Mandiant are integrating AI-based monitoring to track suspicious fund flows and detect AI-generated phishing campaigns.
Some blockchain projects, including Mysten Labs and Algorand, are already preparing for quantum threats by developing quantum-resistant cryptography — ensuring long-term resilience while addressing today’s AI risks.
The Bottom Line
As North Korea’s hackers weaponize AI, the global crypto industry faces a new reality: machine-driven crime that learns, adapts, and scales at lightning speed. Defending against it will require the same technology that made it possible — AI fighting AI.
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FAQs
North Korea’s state-backed hackers, including the Lazarus Group, use artificial intelligence to scan smart contracts, detect vulnerabilities, create phishing campaigns, and automate laundering. AI tools can analyze thousands of blockchain codes in minutes, allowing hackers to launch faster and more precise crypto attacks.
The Bybit hack of February 2025, attributed to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, was the largest crypto theft in history, worth $1.5 billion. Hackers used AI-generated deepfakes and automated exploit detection to breach systems and launder stolen funds through Tron mixers and OTC brokers.
AI poses an immediate risk because it enables real-time scanning, phishing, and automated attacks, while quantum computers capable of breaking blockchain encryption are still years away. Experts say AI-driven cybercrime is already scalable, making it the top concern for crypto platforms in 2025.









