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Recently, a major incident has occurred on the blockchain. A well-known decentralized wallet was hacked, and the hacker injected malicious code through a malicious version update, directly stealing assets worth $2.31 million. Wait, that's not all—the total affected amount has already accumulated to $7 million.
Let's see how ruthless the hackers are. They first appeared on the BSC chain, then dispersed the assets like building blocks: 14.7 BTC, 143.49 ETH, 240,000 BNB, plus various stablecoins. This operation is indeed professional.
The good news is that the wallet team responded quickly, promising full compensation for user losses, and also pushed the message "User funds are safe" (SAFU). But frankly, this incident hit a sore point—the vulnerabilities in decentralized applications during version updates and contract audits still exist. Currently, the team is busy investigating the attack path, and also advises users to follow official security guidelines closely and conduct self-checks promptly.
This incident serves as a wake-up call for the entire industry. Security is not a one-time effort; it is a continuous, never-ending system project. Project teams must be vigilant, and users should also stay alert. Multi-factor verification, regular software updates, storing large assets in hardware wallets—these are not new suggestions, but they are effective. In the on-chain world, true peace of mind comes from respect for and prevention of risks. No step can be relaxed.