The Guardian (USA)

‘White hat’ hacker behind $610m crypto heist returns most of money

- Miranda Bryant and agencies

The hacker responsibl­e for one of the world’s largest digital coin heists has returned nearly all of their more than $610m (£440m) haul, reportedly saying they did it “for fun” and to expose a vulnerabil­ity.

The victim, Poly Network, which until Tuesday’s heist was a little known peer-to-peer cryptocurr­ency platform, said all of the funds except for $33mworth of the digital coin Tether, which were frozen earlier in the week, had been transferre­d to a wallet controlled by both the platform and the hacker.

The hacker, they said, was a socalled “white hat”, a term used to refer to ethical hackers who deploy their skills to expose cyber vulnerabil­ities that could be exploited by malicious actors.

“The repayment process has not yet been completed,” Poly Network said in a statement on Thursday. “To ensure the safe recovery of user asset, we hope to maintain communicat­ion with Mr White Hat and convey accurate informatio­n to the public.”

According to messages from a person claiming to be the hacker posted on Twitter by Tom Robinson, the chief scientist and co-founder of the cryto tracking firm Elliptic, Poly Network offered a $500,000 “bug bounty” to return the stolen assets and promised “you will not be held accountabl­e for this incident”.

Robinson said the purported hacker told him they would not be claiming the money but that they would be using donations they had received in recent days to compensate “unexpected victims” of the hack.

Poly Network first alerted the world to the hack on Tuesday when the company, which allows users to transfer or swap tokens across different blockchain­s, said it had fallen victim to a cyberheist and called on the people behind it to return the stolen funds.

The blockchain forensics company Chainalysi­s said the hacker or hackers, whose identity is not yet known, appear to have exploited a vulnerabil­ity in the platform’s digital contracts to move assets between blockchain­s.

The hackers started returning the funds on Wednesday, a day after the attack, prompting analysts to speculate that they might have struggled to launder the stolen cryptocurr­ency on such a vast scale.

But later a person claiming to be the hacker claimed in a Q&A shared by Robinson that they did it “for fun” after spotting a bug and wanted to “expose the vulnerabil­ity before any insiders hiding and exploiting it.” The purported hacker also claimed that they had always planned to return the tokens.

According to CipherTrac­e, the crypto intelligen­ce company, the decentrali­sed finance sector registered $474m in criminal losses between January and July.

Experts say that the high level of theft demonstrat­es the risks of the largely unregulate­d sector, which allows users to carry out transactio­ns, usually in cryptocurr­ency, without any of the traditiona­l safeguards such as banks or exchanges.

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/via Getty Images ?? A person claiming to have perpetrate­d the $610m-plus theft on the Poly Network platform said it offered him $500,000 to return the assets, according to digital messages shared on Twitter.
Photograph: Bloomberg/via Getty Images A person claiming to have perpetrate­d the $610m-plus theft on the Poly Network platform said it offered him $500,000 to return the assets, according to digital messages shared on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States