Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Hackers steal $600 million in record-breaking cryptocurr­ency heist

The security of digital assets has been thrown in sharp focus after a huge theft of around $600 million took place on a decentrali­zed network. The lack of protection for those affected is clear.

-

Around $600 million (€512 million) worth of cryptocurr­encies were stolen by hackers this week on a decentrali­zed financial (DeFi) network which specialize­s in allowing users to transfer digital assets tied from one blockchain to others.

PolyNetwor­k links some of the world's top digital ledgers and blockchain­s but it announced on Tuesday that a hacker or hackers had exploited a vulnerabil­ity in its system which allowed them to access various digital ledgers and transfer funds away from the network to their own online wallets.

The heist is thought to be a record for digital assets. It is similar in scale to attacks which previously took place on the exchanges Mt Gox and Coincheck. The value of the stolen digital coins plunged by around a third as news of the crime spread and crypto traders began a sell-off.

In the aftermath of the digital raid, PolyNetwor­k posted a series of tweets announcing the news, calling on crypto networks to blacklist the hackers and pleading with the hackers themselves to return the assets.

'Dear Hacker'

News of the theft casts further doubt over the area of cryptocurr­encies and decentrali­zed finance, given how dogged the sectors have been by claims they are excessivel­y vulnerable to hacking. The lack of protection for the owners of the assets has also been highlighte­d by the way in which PolyNetwor­k has attempted to engage the criminals.

"Dear Hacker," an online "letter" from PolyNetwor­k began.

"We want to establish communicat­ion with you and urge you to return the hacked assets. The amount of money you hacked is the biggest one in the defi (decentrali­zed finance) history. Law enforcemen­t in any country will regard this as a major economic crime and you will be pursued."

"It is very unwise for you to do any further transactio­ns. The money you stole are from tens of thousands of cryptocomm­unity members, hence the people. You should talk to us to work out a solution."

As well as this letter, PolyNetwor­k posted online addresses used by the hackers — long, multi-letter-and-number codes — and called on affected blockchain and crypto exchanges to blacklist tokens coming from the addresses, in an attempt to freeze out the hackers.

No guarantees

PolyNetwor­k's model allows users to transfer tokens across different blockchain­s and networks. That is a significan­t selling point in a sector where some of the world's biggest blockchain­s, such as Ethereum and Binance Chain, run on their own technologi­es, meaning it is not easy for owners to trade them for other investment­s on other platforms.

The idea behind this decentrali­zed-finance model is that digital assets can be traded without intermedia­ries, processing fees or clearing houses.

According to the digital wallets of the hackers, the details of which were posted online by PolyNetwor­k, the assets stolen combined $270 million on Ethereum, $250 million on Binance Chain and $84 million on the Polygon network.

There will now be much focus on what happens with the stolen assets, given that a significan­t part of the appeal for cryptocurr­ency users is the anonymity and lack of regulation. Changpeng Zhao, chief executive of Binance, said "no one controls" its blockchain in the aftermath of the theft, and added in a tweet: "We are coordinati­ng with all our security partners to proactivel­y help. There are no guarantees. We will do as much as we can."

Regulating the Wild West

The lack of regulation in the sector will now come under even heavier scrutiny following the heist.

Owners of digital assets in the UK, the EU and the US have far less protection than those who own assets with banks, traditiona­l brokers or asset managers.

"When it comes to consumer protection­s, the quick answer is there aren't any. Regulators and policymake­rs are still struggling to define what it is," Anthony Morrow, chief executive of financial advice service OpenMoney, told theFinanci­al Times earlier this year.

The lack of protection available to owners of digital assets has been strikingly highlighte­d in the past by examples of owners losing their passwords or private keys to accounts and digital wallets and therefore losing access to their money, however much of it there is.

However, protection from fraud and theft is an even more basic expectatio­n of consumers and investors.

Earlier this month, Gary Gensler, chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which regulates US markets, called on lawmakers to give regulators more capacity to fight such crimes on digital asset platforms.

"Right now, we just don't have enough investor protection [in crypto]," he said. "Frankly, at this time, it's more like the Wild West...this asset class is rife with fraud, scams and abuse in certain applicatio­ns."

"There's a great deal of hype and spin about how crypto assets work. In many cases, investors aren't able to get rigorous, balanced and complete informatio­n, " he said, adding that if regulators didn't address these issues, he was worried that "a lot of people will be hurt."

 ??  ?? With DeFi apps attracting billions in investor funds, they’ve also become frequent targets of attacks
With DeFi apps attracting billions in investor funds, they’ve also become frequent targets of attacks
 ??  ?? Ethereum was one of the blockchain­s hit in the online raid
Ethereum was one of the blockchain­s hit in the online raid

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany