Financial and Business News

dForce Hacker Returns $25M in Stolen Funds, Reason Unknown

Tuesday, 21/04/2020 | 13:13 GMT by Arnab Shome
  • The exact amount of the returned value is slightly less than the stolen value due to crypto conversions.
dForce Hacker Returns $25M in Stolen Funds, Reason Unknown
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The attack on the Chinese decentralized finance (DeFi) platform dForce has taken another turn as the hacker returned almost all of the 25 million in the compromised fund.

As seen on public Blockchain analyzer, the siphoned Ethers were returned in multiple transactions - $2.79 million in the digital currency were returned on Monday while the rest were returned today.

Some of the transactions were extremely large - in one transaction, the attacker transferred 57,992 Ether worth around $10 million to dForce wallet. Another $10 million were transferred using USD-pegged stablecoins including USDT, BUSD, TUSD, DAI, USDC, HUSD, and PAX.

The exact value of the return funds were $24.3 million, a few hundreds of thousands less than the stolen amount, as the attacker converted a portion of the Ether into some other digital currencies.

dForce was attacked last Sunday, resulting in the siphoning of almost 100 percent of the total locked digital currencies on the platform.

A major DeFi platform

Prior to the attack, the platform was ranked among the top 10 DeFi projects and recently raised $1.5 million in a seed round, gaining funds from Multicoin Capital, Huobi Capital and CMB International (CMBI). The company aimed to utilize the funds to increase its staff and in bringing a new product line.

Though the DeFi platform did not reveal anything official about the return of the stolen funds, according to a media report, the attacker decided to return the compromised funds as his IPs were shared with the Singapore police.

Notably, media reports also revealed that the hacker entered into negotiation with the founders of the DeFi project.

The attack on the Chinese decentralized finance (DeFi) platform dForce has taken another turn as the hacker returned almost all of the 25 million in the compromised fund.

As seen on public Blockchain analyzer, the siphoned Ethers were returned in multiple transactions - $2.79 million in the digital currency were returned on Monday while the rest were returned today.

Some of the transactions were extremely large - in one transaction, the attacker transferred 57,992 Ether worth around $10 million to dForce wallet. Another $10 million were transferred using USD-pegged stablecoins including USDT, BUSD, TUSD, DAI, USDC, HUSD, and PAX.

The exact value of the return funds were $24.3 million, a few hundreds of thousands less than the stolen amount, as the attacker converted a portion of the Ether into some other digital currencies.

dForce was attacked last Sunday, resulting in the siphoning of almost 100 percent of the total locked digital currencies on the platform.

A major DeFi platform

Prior to the attack, the platform was ranked among the top 10 DeFi projects and recently raised $1.5 million in a seed round, gaining funds from Multicoin Capital, Huobi Capital and CMB International (CMBI). The company aimed to utilize the funds to increase its staff and in bringing a new product line.

Though the DeFi platform did not reveal anything official about the return of the stolen funds, according to a media report, the attacker decided to return the compromised funds as his IPs were shared with the Singapore police.

Notably, media reports also revealed that the hacker entered into negotiation with the founders of the DeFi project.

About the Author: Arnab Shome
Arnab Shome
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Arnab Shome is an electronics engineer-turned-financial editor. He holds a Bachelor of Technology from the National Institute of Technology, Agartala. He entered the retail trading industry about a decade ago, covering the cryptocurrency market for Finance Magnates, and later expanded his coverage to include forex and CFDs as well. His work at Finance Magnates includes C-level interviews, data-driven analysis, opinion pieces, and scoops of industry exclusives. He also contributes to Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry report. Area of coverage: 1. CFD broker-related news 2. Industry-related Regulatory updates and developments 3. New retail trading trends 4. Prop trading industry updates 5. Executive interviews Education: Bachelor of Technology - National Institute of Technology, Agartala (India)

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