U.S. Crypto Firm Harmony Loses $100 Million Worth Of Coins To Hackers

Share post:

U.S. cryptocurrency firm Harmony has confirmed a major cyberattack in which hackers stole around $100 million worth of digital coins from one of the company’s key products.

Harmony explained that the cyber theft hit its Horizon “bridge,” a tool used to transfer crypto between different blockchains.

According to Elliptic, a firm that tracks publicly available blockchain data, the hackers stole various Harmony cryptocurrencies, including Ether, Tether and USD Coin. The hackers then exchanged the stolen digital coins for Ether via decentralized cryptocurrency exchanges.

While the company gave no further details about the attack, Harmony said in a tweet that it was “working with national authorities and forensic specialists to identify the culprit and retrieve the stolen funds.”

“We are currently narrowing down the potential attack vectors while working to identify the culprit,” a spokesperson said. Harmony had already tried to contact the hacker via a transaction to their crypto wallet address.

The sources for this piece include an article in Reuters.

Featured Tech Jobs

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Cyber Security Today, Week in Review for week ending Friday, April 26, 2024

This episode features a discussion on the latest in the Change Healthcare ransomware attack, a vulnerability in an abandoned Apache open source project, the next step in Canada's proposed critical infrastructure cybersecurity law and the future

Cyber Security Today, April 26, 2024 – Patch warnings for Cisco ASA gateways and a WordPress plugin

This episode reports on the malicious plugin worm that refuses to die

Zuckerberg shares his vision with investors and Meta stock tanks

In an era where instant gratification is often the norm, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s strategic pivot towards long-term,...

Cyber Security Today, April 24, 2024 – Good news/bad news in Mandiant report, UnitedHealth admits paying a ransomware gang, and more

This episode reports on the danger of using expired open-source packages, a tool used by a Russian hacking group and passw

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways