Hackers siphon $600 million in digital tokens, crypto network says
Poly Network breach would be among biggest heists to target cryptocurrency industry.
The alleged hack was a blow to supporters of decentralized finance, or DeFi, which has been one of the fastest-expanding areas of the booming cryptocurrency market. It also highlighted the lack of consumer and investor protections in a market with only light oversight from financial regulators.
Poly Network has developed a computer protocol, or set of rules, that allows users to transfer tokens tied to one blockchain to a different network. Many of the world’s most widely used blockchains, such as Binance Chain and Ethereum, have developed independently, and their coins, offered as an incentive to users, run on separate technologies.
That means investors cannot easily move their tokens to a different blockchain to trade them or use them as collateral for another investment. . .
The alleged hacker exploited a vulnerability in Poly Network’s “contract calls,” a type of test that is not intended to be published on the blockchain, to access the ledgers and transfer money, the network said.
The tokens were valued at about $600 million prior to the news of the alleged hack, consisting of more than $270 million on the Ethereum blockchain, $250 million on the Binance Smart Chain, and $84 million on the Polygon network, according to wallet addresses published by Poly Network on Twitter.
Etherscan indicated that the hacker had taken alt-coins such as Binance Coin and ether as well as dozens of smaller tokens, including Shiba Inu, Matic, and Uniswap. The dollar value of the stolen coins dropped to $394 million as news of the theft spread and investors sold cryptocurrencies, knocking the tokens’ prices.
Poly Network called on groups known as “miners,” which process transactions, and centralized crypto exchanges to block transfers. “We will take legal actions and we urge the hackers to return the assets,” it said.
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“There are no guarantees. We will do as much as we can,” he added.
Paolo Ardoino, chief technical officer at stablecoin company Tether, said the group had frozen about $33 million worth of its tokens, which were on the Poly Network. A substantial proportion was also in USD Coin, operated by payments service company Circle, according to Etherscan. Circle did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Gary Gensler, chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the US markets regulator, had called on lawmakers this month to give watchdogs more power to protect investors from illicit activity on DeFi platforms
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