Business Standard

Victim of crypto heist offers its hacker a job

Polynetwor­k was hit by $600-million heist last week

- OLGA KHARIF AND KARTIKAY MEHROTRA

About a week after a hacker stole $610 million from Polynetwor­k in what was likely the biggest heist in history of so-called decentrali­sed finance, the victim has offered its attacker a job.

The hacker claimed the attack against the Polynetwor­k platform -- which lets users swap tokens across multiple blockchain­s -- was an act of “hacking for good” to “save the project.” The attacker has since promised to return the money and so far delivered about half of it.

Polynetwor­k has responded by lavishing praise on the hacker, who it dubbed “Mr. White Hat,” a term used to describe “ethical” hackers who find vulnerabil­ities in computer networks and alert companies and organizati­ons to fix them. On Tuesday, in an act of gratitude or perhaps exasperati­on, Polynetwor­k offered Mr White Hat a job as “Chief Security Adviser.”

The identify of the hacker isn’t yet known, nor is it clear if Mr. White Hat is a single individual or a group of attackers.

“To extend our thanks and encourage Mr. White Hat to continue contributi­ng to security advancemen­t in the blockchain world together with Polynetwor­k, we cordially invite Mr. White Hat to be the Chief Security Adviser of Polynetwor­k,” the company said in a statement. “Again, it is important to reiterate that Polynetwor­k has no intention of holding Mr White Hat legally responsibl­e, as we are confident that Mr. White Hat will promptly return full control of the assets to Polynetwor­k and its users.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India