Mixin Network suspends operations following $200 million hack

Mixin Network, an open-source, peer-to-peer transactional network for digital assets, has announced today on Twitter that deposits and withdrawals are suspended effective immediately due to a $200 million hack the platform suffered on Saturday.

The incident occurred on September 23 early in the morning, Hong Kong time, and the attack reportedly targeted the database of Mixin’s cloud service provider.

Mixin tweet

Due to the substantial amount lost in the hack, the situation has seriously troubled the platform's users.

Mixin has stated that they would take action to address the problems caused by the loss of assets but any solutions would be announced at a later time.

Mixin’s founder, Feng Xiaodong, will give more explanations about the incident via a public address scheduled for later today.

Blockchain trackers like PeckShield and Lookonchain have identified roughly $141 million of the stolen assets, analyzed as $93.5M in ETH, $23.5M in DAI (swapped from USDT), and $23.3M in BTC.

Tracked stolen amounts
Tracked stolen amounts (PeckShield)

This makes the Mixin incident one of the most significant crypto heists this year and creates immediate suspicion about the Lazarus group being responsible for the attack.

The North Korean hackers, who are specialists in crypto heists, have been blamed for stealing a total of $240,000,000 worth of cryptocurrency this year, after compromising Atomic Wallet, Alphapo, Stake.com, and CoinsPaid.

So far, the Mixin hack has not been attributed to Lazarus and no evidence so far points to the North Korean group being involved.

BleepingComputer will update this post as soon as more information from trustworthy sources becomes available.

Related Articles:

Hackers steal $53 million worth of cryptocurrency from CoinEx

Crypto casino Stake.com loses $41 million to hot wallet hackers

Lazarus hackers linked to the $35 million Atomic Wallet heist

Crypto firm Nansen asks users to reset passwords after vendor breach

Atomic Wallet hacks lead to over $35 million in crypto stolen