In eye-opening developments, the anonymous criminals responsible for the $41M heist from cryptocurrency casino Stake, shifted approximately $328,000 in Binance Coin (BNB) and Polygon (MATIC) tokens. This is the latest move following the hack on September 4, and interestingly falls within the broader pattern of the hackers gradually transferring smaller amounts of the pilfered funds to various digital wallets, which they’ve been executing since the incident. So far, we have seen $4.8 million moved, a little over 10% of the initial heist amount.
The modus operandi involved transferring BNB and MATIC tokens to an externally owned address, and then quickly being moved onto the Avalanche blockchain. One might argue this is a direct result of Stake’s wallets having a vulnerability that left open an avenue for such an attack, the details of which the hackers may have exploited. The hackers had somehow obtained the private keys to Stake’s Binance Smart Chain and Ethereum hot wallets used for their operations.
Ironically, as the stolen amount from Stake pushes the total end-2023 estimates of funds pillaged via scams and hacks past the $1 billion mark, the question to ask is: Are we doing enough to protect our digital assets? It’s not like the writing was not on the wall; even before the Stake exploit occurrence, the potential loss was calculated to be a staggering $997 million.
As we continue to explore crypto’s potential, the industry has to grapple with serious security concerns. Recently, a cryptocurrency whale lost $24 million in staked Ether (ETH) in a phishing attack, and Vitalik Buterin‘s X (formerly Twitter) account was compromised, luring victims into a nonfungible token scam which totalled over $690,000. In recent incidents, Pepe (PEPE) coin’s withdrawal exposed investors to a $13.2 million loss, Exactly Protocol’s incident resulted in a $7.3 million exploit and a security vulnerability on Balancer network resulted in a loss of $2.1 million.
In combating these vulnerabilities, AI has been lauded for its potential to identify hazards. The Banana Gun exploit offers an intriguing case where OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT reportedly identified a bug within seconds, though skeptics argue that AIs risk creating more problems than they solve. Either way, we must acknowledge that as we continue navigating the crypto landscape, security remains a pivotal concern that we cannot ignore.
Source: Cointelegraph