UwU Lend offers a $5M bounty to whoever catches its exploiter
The team behind the UwU Lend protocol is offering a $5 million bounty to whoever identifies its attacker after they pulled off a second exploit on the protocol.
“Repayment deadline for the funds you stole has passed. 5 Million Dollar bounty to the first person to identify and locate you,” UwU wrote to the hacker in a June 13 onchain message after they didn’t transfer 80% of the stolen funds before UwU’s requested deadline — June 12 at 5:00pm UTC.
UwU claims the $5 million bounty would be in Ether ( ETH ) and that it would be paid out before funds are recovered or charges are laid.
UwU’s latest onchain message to its hacker. Source: EtherscanIt comes as the same hacker pulled off a second $3.7 million exploit , stealing funds from UwU’s uDAI, uWETH, uLUSD, uFRAX, uCRVUSD and uUSDT pools on June 13, according to blockchain security firm Cyvers.
Cyvers said the two hacks were carried out by the same hacker wallet address “0x841…21f47.”
How it all unfolded
The first exploit saw $20.3 million wiped from a price manipulation attack on June 10.
UwU then requested the hacker to return 80% of the funds — allowing them to keep the remaining 20%. It also assured the hacker that they would cease legal action.
UwU’s earlier onchain message to its hacker. Source: EtherscanHowever, no response was received from the hacker, who went on to commit the second $3.7 million exploit shortly before UwU announced the $5 million bounty.
The second exploit occurred while UwU started reimbursing victims from the first $20.3 million exploit, which resulted from a price manipulation attack.
Over $9.7 million has already been repaid to victims, according to a UwU Lend X post.
Related: Holograph fell 80% in 9 hours after exploiter mints 1B additional HLG
Despite now losing a combined $24 million, the UWU Lend token (UWU) is only down 20% to $2.51 over the last week, according to CoinGecko.
UWU’s change in price over the last week. Source: CoinGeckoIt now boasts a market cap of $22.6 billion.
Nearly $19 billion in cryptocurrencies have been stolen since the first industry hack was reported in June 2011, a recent Crystal Intelligence report shows.
Magazine: How to protect your crypto in a volatile market — Bitcoin OGs and experts weigh in
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.
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