KyberSwap offers 10% bounty to hacker following $47 million exploit
Quick Take KyberSwap offered a 10% bounty to the hacker who stole $47 million. The team replied to an on-chain message previously left by the perpetrator.
Decentralized exchange protocol KyberSwap offered a 10% bounty to the hacker who executed an exploit leading to the loss of $47 million .
The attack, which occurred earlier this week, targeted KyberSwap’s Elastic pools, compromising funds across multiple blockchains including Arbitrum, Optimism, Ethereum, Polygon, and Base.
The perpetrator had previously left a message on the blockchain suggesting an interest in negotiating with the team. The message stated: “Dear Kyberswap Developers, Employees, DAO members, and LPs, negotiations will start in a few hours when I am fully rested. Thank you.”
Today, KyberSwap proposed a deal. In an on-chain message , the team offered an implied white hat bounty reward equal to 10% of the stolen funds (roughly $4.7 million) on the basis that the hacker returns the remaining 90% to a specified address by 6 am UTC on November 25.
Ultimatum to the attacker
In the message, KyberSwap co-founder Victor Tran said the hacker can return the funds or "stay on the run."
The bounty offer is part of KyberSwap’s efforts to mitigate the consequences of the incident and make liquidity providers whole. Security firm Beosin explained that the vulnerability that resulted in the attack was due to an issue with the tick interval boundaries on Kyber's liquidity pools. This enabled the hacker to artificially double the liquidity, which they were then able to drain.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Trump nominates Congresswoman Lori Chavez-DeRemer as Labor Secretary
ZKasino official misappropriated user funds and started to go long on ETH on the chain
CFTC report endorses tokenizing trading collateral