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Cryptocurrency News by Tradecoind2
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[QUOTE="tradecoind2, post: 328879, member: 103239"] [HEADING=2]Fan mail and ETH tip sent to KyberSwap hacker who stole $48 million[/HEADING] Some victims of the $48 million KyberSwap hack are no doubt anxiously waiting for the DeFi platform attacker to make his next move. However, others appear to be taking a more proactive approach: talking directly to miners through the Ethereum blockchain. “Hello! You did a great job, you are a great person!”, one person wrote in a message accompanying the transaction. I lost more than $155,000 USDC, you can check my wallet. Can you please send some money to help my family? I can transfer money to any wallet, please help me!”. Other messages are much more formal: “Hello grandparents! I am a liquidity provider on Arbitrum — 259809.7 DAI. I want to negotiate and ask how much bonus you want? I believe that code is law and that is completely up to you. Thanks in advance!”. KyberSwap aggregates DeFi liquidity into a single pool, providing services such as a decentralized exchange and wallet for end users to instantly swap tokens through a network of smart contracts. Following this chain first discovered something was wrong with KyberSwap on Wednesday night. Millions The cryptocurrency was suddenly withdrawn from KyberSwap contracts deployed to Ethereum, Polygon, Coinbase’s Base, Arbitrum, and Optimism, with the last two most affected. A series of complex flash loan attacks and other targeted mining activities have depleted token liquidity pools. KyberSwap responded by urging users to withdraw funds from the platform, and approximately $77 million was quickly withdrawn. Currently, less than $8 million is held in KyberSwap, according to DeFiLlama. To date, the stolen money is still hidden at many different hacker addresses. After the attack subsided, the hacker initiated a transaction with the following message: “Dear Kyberswap developers, employees, DAO members, and liquidity providers, negotiations will begin in a few hours once I am fully rested.” This happened about a day and 18 hours ago. But nothing since then. Ethereum allows adding a message to the input field when sending a transaction and costs around $2. While some of the messages told the hacker he could keep some of the cryptocurrency if he returned the rest, it’s unclear whether notes like “if that money runs out, my child can’t go to school anymore, Because I don’t have any more money, please help me” are true stories from victims or not. Some more gentle messages: “Hello. Congratulations on that hit it was crazy, you look like a smart, arrogant and funny guy, can we talk on Telegram?”. “Hello legend, please send me 1 million to become a dangerous person in my life, thank you, love you,” another person wrote. There are others who advise: “I don’t know what you want to do next, but just wanted to remind that stablecoins like USDC have blocking addresses in the smart contract code.” Some even sent tips, including one worth 0.001 ETH ($2.06) and one worth 0.0000069 ETH ($0.014). Typically, hackers have to wait days, months, or even years before attempting to launder stolen cryptocurrency. Sometimes hackers return the money after taking 10% or 20%, treating the whole thing as a gray hat joke. [B]Source:[/B] [URL unfurl="true"]https://tradecoind2.com/fan-mail-and-eth-tip-sent-to-kyberswap-hacker-who-stole-48-million/[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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