Upbit Exchange Resumes Ether Services Months After $49M Hack
Upbit said users will need to create new wallet addresses to resume trading.
South Korea-based Upbit has restarted ether wallet services nearly two months after hackers made off with $49 million of the cryptocurrency.
Traders will need to create a new wallet address to which ETH held on the exchange will be automatically deposited, the firm said.
On Nov. 26, Upbit confirmed an "abnormal transaction" had resulted in the exchange losing more than 342,000 ETH from its hot wallet, which at the time was worth approximately $49 million.
The exchange transferred all remaining digital assets into cold storage as a precaution. Although user funds had not been affected, CEO Lee Seok-woo said in a statement following the attack that Upbit would suspend all trading functions temporarily.
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Days later, hackers divided the stolen ETH among several wallet addresses. One analyst suggested the group may be sending small test amounts through rival exchange Huobi in an attempt to launder the funds.
In its announcement, Upbit requested users delete their previous addresses, reiterating that wallets created before the hack could not be used: "The recovery of ETH sent to previous addresses from now could be long and costly process," the exchange warned.