Consensys unknowingly outsourced developer work to North Korean

Through an introduction with a “reputable third-party service provider,“ the company took on a developer who, as part of an investigation, was revealed to be tied to North Korea.
Blockchain company Consensys accidentally used a software developer linked to North Korea who had access to some of its systems for a month.
First reported on Friday by Drop Site, Consensys earlier this year took on a software developer under the alias Tyler Knapp who was later discovered to have ties to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, or North Korea. The move caused the company to temporarily suspend product releases and conduct an investigation into the matter
“‘Knapp’ was introduced to us through an existing relationship with a reputable third-party service provider and collaborated with Consensys as a consultant,” Consensys general counsel Matt Corva stold Cointelegraph. “He was never hired as a Consensys employee. Very quickly after being introduced, we discovered the threat, followed our security protocols, immediately terminated any access and launched a comprehensive investigation that confirmed there was no misappropriation of assets or data, no malicious code deployed, and no impact to user safety and security.”
Source: Cointelegraph →Related News
- 1 hour ago
Galaxy lands 15-year Texas Tech stadium naming rights deal
- 2 hours ago
Crypto Biz: When dollars disappear, stablecoins step in
- 5 hours ago
OKX Europe lets users convert USDT to MiCA-compliant USDC
- 5 hours ago
Senator Warren requests 2026 reporting for Trump’s crypto earnings after $1.4B d...
- 8 hours ago
HSBC wins Bank of England approval to enter Digital Securities Sandbox
