
Coinbase CEO says he’s mandating in-person orientation to combat North Korean hackers seeking remote jobs
How did your country report this? Share your view in the comments.
Diverging Reports Breakdown
Coinbase CEO says he’s mandating in-person orientation to combat North Korean hackers seeking remote jobs
The FBI is cracking down on North Korean workers using the internet. The U.S. government is also trying to crack down on the use of the internet for illicit purposes. The FBI is working with the Department of Homeland Security to find out who is using the Internet for illegal activities. The agency is also working with Congress to find a way to make it harder for North Korea to use the internet to make money from illegal activities in the United States. The US government is working on a plan to make the internet more secure by making it more difficult for people to use it for illicit activities, the FBI said.
Coinbase prides itself on “remote-first” work, but CEO Brian Armstrong said the company was forced to make changes to thwart a foe: North Korea.
Armstrong said that North Korean IT workers have tried to leverage the company’s remote work policy to gain employment and then access to the crypto exchange’s sensitive systems. Coinbase works with law enforcement, but Armstrong said the threat just keeps growing.
“It feels like there’s 500 new people graduating every quarter from some kind of school they have — that’s just their whole job,” Armstrong told John Collison, cofounder and president of online payment provider Stripe, in an episode of Collison’s “Cheeky Pint” podcast posted on Wednesday.
Related video
Armstrong said that Coinbase is requiring all workers to come to the US for in-person orientation and that anyone with access to sensitive systems must hold US citizenship and submit to fingerprinting.
Last month, the FBI put out an updated warning about North Korean IT workers who target private companies “to illicitly generate substantial revenue for the regime.” The FBI said that the IT workers work with both “witting and unwitting” people within the US.
The FBI said US-based facilitators have reshipped company laptops, attended virtual interviews on behalf of North Korean workers, and even created front businesses.
Armstrong said that in many cases, workers themselves might be a target and are being coerced to participate. He said that Coinbase requires prospective employees to turn on their camera during interviews “to prove they’re not AI” or not being coached.
Related stories Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know
Ultimately, Armstrong said that security risks have led Coinbase to build up US-based customer support, pointing to the company’s new facility in Charlotte, North Carolina.
“It feels like proof of physical presence is going to be become a bigger deal in a world of AI, deepfakes, just higher stakes for all this kind of cyber crime stuff where in a weird way you see certain areas where remote work goes backwards,” Collison said.
Armstrong said Coinbase has also made aggressive efforts to deter internal threats to sensitive information. In some cases, “threat actors” have offered hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes to customer service agents to take photos of sensitive information.
Part of the way Coinbase deters this, Armstrong said, is by locking down the information employees have access to. It’s also by making it clear what the consequences will be.
“When we catch people, we don’t walk them out the door, they go to jail,” Armstrong said. “And we try to make it very clear that you’re destroying the rest of your life by taking this, even if you think, whatever, it is a life-changing amount of money, it’s not worth going to jail.”
Source: https://www.businessinsider.com/coinbase-north-korea-threats-remote-work-2025-8