PANews reported on April 18 that according to Cointelegraph, Kenny Li, co-founder of Manta Network, recently encountered a Zoom phishing attack carefully designed by the North Korean hacker group Lazarus Group. The attacker used stolen real videos of team members to induce Li to download malicious scripts in a video conference. "These pictures don't look like they are generated by AI, and the picture quality is like that of an ordinary webcam. But the system suddenly asked to download the script file, and I immediately quit on alert." Li disclosed on social media. He tried to verify the other party's identity through Telegram, but the attacker quickly deleted the record and blocked him. Li pointed out that this attack specifically targets the working habits of executives in the encryption industry: "Exploiting the target's trust in sudden meeting requests and fatigue caused by daily information overload." Many industry insiders confirmed that they have recently encountered similar attacks, including being asked to download the so-called "business-only version" of Zoom. Li reminded that any sudden meeting that requires downloading files should be highly vigilant.