
“On the table is a bounty equivalent to 10 of users’ funds taken from them by your hack,” said KyberSwap to its hacker in an on-chain message.
“On the table is a bounty equivalent to 10 of users’ funds taken from them by your hack,” said KyberSwap to its hacker in an on-chain message.
Crypto investors claiming “my coins disappeared suddenly” have been found to recently download crypto applications from unverified sources.
A loophole in the code allowed the hacker to drain funds worth roughly $455,000 from Arcadia‘s Ethereum (darcWETH) and Optimism (darcUSDC) vaults collectively.
A few hours into the hack, to everyone’s surprise, the attacker surprisingly reached out to the Tornado Cash community with a new proposal, hinting at their intent to give back the governance control.
Russian cybersecurity and anti-virus provider Kaspersky detected 5,040,520 crypto phishing attacks in the year as compared to 3,596,437 in 2021.
Twenty-three days after the hack, on April 4, Euler Finance announced the total possible recovery of the lost funds, thus ending the $1 million bounty.
A public burn function introduced in the latest upgrade allegedly allows users to burn tokens from other addresses.
While Chainalysis suspected the involvement of North Korea in the Euler Finance hack, they highlighted the possibility of misdirection by other hackers.
Since Dec. 2022, the two malicious files — MortalKombat ransomware and Laplas Clipper malware threats — have been actively scouting the Internet for stealing cryptocurrencies from unwary investors.