SafeMoon hacker’s use of centralized exchanges could help law enforcement: Match System
SafeMoon was exploited in March earlier this year after a smart contract update led to a burn call vulnerability allowing hackers to transfer funds. Go to Source
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SafeMoon was exploited in March earlier this year after a smart contract update led to a burn call vulnerability allowing hackers to transfer funds. Go to Source
The bug the Onyx Protocol hacker exploited to steal $2.1 million was previously used by a hacker to extort $7 million from Hundred Finance. Go to Source
Amid ongoing investigations from Unibot and blockchain investigators, Scopescan advised users to revoke the approvals for the exploited contract and move the funds to a new wallet. Go to Source
A cryptocurrency rug pull is one of the simplest scams to prevent, according to the blockchain security auditor Hacken. Go to Source
According to cybersecurity analysts at 0xScope and CertiK, threat actors may prefer using BNB Smart Chain contracts because it’s cheaper and seen as having lower security than Ethereum. Go to Source
This was the result of a collaboration between Atomic Wallet, forensic companies and centralized exchanges following reports from users claiming unauthorized transactions from their wallets. Go to Source
Threat actors have worked out a way to hide malicious payloads in Binance smart contracts to lure victims into updating their browsers from fake prompts, according to cybersecurity researchers. Go to Source
Blockchain analytics firm Elliptic didn’t rule out the possibility of the $477 million hack being an FTX inside job. Go to Source
Stars Arena was hacked for roughly $3 million worth of AVAX tokens, with the hacker reportedly sending the funds to the Fixed Float crypto exchange. Go to Source
The Web3 platform’s website has been restored, but the company still warns against using it. The hack may be linked to September’s attack on Balancer. Go to Source