This is not a hacker movie, it's a real-life "institutional failure".
In the Gwangju District Prosecutor's Office in South Korea,
during a routine check of seized criminal case bitcoins,
it is suspected that due to mistakenly entering a phishing site,
a large amount of BTC was lost,
market rumors suggest the amount could be as high as 70 billion won ๐ฃ (official confirmation pending).
๐ This incident has released two completely different signals:
โ The negative side of the crypto industry:
Even law enforcement agencies have a serious lack of understanding of private keys and on-chain security.
BTC will not "disappear," but operational mistakes mean permanent loss.
It once again proves: without understanding on-chain security, anyone managing coins could face failure.
โ
But in the long run, it is actually a positive sign:
Bitcoin does not recognize power or institutions; the rules are the same for everyone.
There is no "backdoor recovery," which strengthens BTC's decentralization and scarcity properties.
Every instance of "mistakenly losing coins" is a real reduction in supply.
๐ง My core viewpoint:
It is not that Bitcoin is unsafe,
but that the people who do not understand Bitcoin operating it are the most dangerous.
In the future, those who can truly hold, custody, and regulate crypto assets
will definitely be institutions that understand on-chain logic + risk control processes,
not the old systems relying on USB drives + manual checks.
In summary:
The biggest risk in the crypto space has never been the code, but the people.
#ไธไปป็พ่ๅจไธปๅธญไผๆฏ่ฐ๏ผ #็นๆๆฎๅฏนๆฌงๆดฒๅ ๅพๅ
ณ็จ #ENSO #ZKC #dusk $G $NOM $AXS