Mmegi

Hackers steal $600m in major cryptocurr­ency heist

- (BBC Business)

LONDON: Hackers have stolen some $600m (£433m) in what appears to be one of the largest cryptocurr­ency heists ever. Blockchain site Poly Network said hackers had exploited a vulnerabil­ity in its system and taken thousands of digital tokens such as Ether. In a letter posted on Twitter, it urged the thieves to “establish communicat­ion and return the hacked assets”.

In scale, the hack is on par with huge recent breaches at exchanges such as Coincheck and Mt Gox. In its letter Poly Network said: “The amount of money you have hacked is one of the biggest in defi [decentrali­sed finance] history.

“Law enforcemen­t in any country will regard this as a major economic crime and you will be pursued. “The money you stole are [sic] from tens of thousands of crypto community members, hence the people.” Poly Network said a preliminar­y investigat­ion found a hacker exploited a “vulnerabil­ity between contract calls”.

It urged various exchanges to block deposits of the coins, after millions of dollars in tokens were transferre­d to separate cryptocurr­ency wallets. About $267m of Ether currency has been taken, $252m of Binance coins and roughly $85 million in USDC tokens.

Binance chief executive, Changpeng Zhao said his firm was aware of the hack but added there was only so much he could do. He said the group was “co-ordinating with all our security partners to proactivel­y help”. “There are no guarantees,” he added. Poly Network is a decentrali­sed finance - or Defi - provider, which allows users to transfer tokens tied to one blockchain to a different network. Cryptocurr­ency systems such as Ether and Binance were developed independen­tly, so have struggled to work in conjunctio­n with each other.

Losses from fraud in the Defi sector hit an all-time high of $474m in the first seven months of the year, a report from research company CipherTrac­e said on Tuesday. But losses from crime in the overall cryptocurr­ency market dropped sharply to $681m, compared to $1.9bn for the whole of 2020 and $4.5bn in 2019.

Last week, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged Defi lender Blockchain Credit Partners and two of its top executives for raising $30m through allegedly fraudulent offerings. The case is the SEC’s first involving securities in the Defi space.

 ?? PIC: FORBES ?? Gone: Hackers have pulled off an audacious heist
PIC: FORBES Gone: Hackers have pulled off an audacious heist

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Botswana