Trading Firm Offers Deal in $25M Crypto Heist, But Will Hacker Accept?

Cryptocurrency trading company Kronos Research is hoping their approach will help recover most of the $25 million stolen by a hacker this month – try to strike a deal with the thief.


Keypoints

  • Cryptocurrency trading firm Kronos Research was hacked, resulting in $25 million stolen
  • Kronos has publicly offered the hacker a 10% bounty (around $2.5 million) to return 90% of funds
  • Theft occurred after hacker gained access to Kronos’ API keys
  • Public negotiations between hackers and victims has become a growing trend
  • Decentralized finance protocols have seen over $1.2 billion in thefts this year

The Taiwan-based firm publicly offered the unknown attacker a 10% cut, around $2.5 million, in exchange for returning 90% of the pilfered funds. It’s just the latest case of victims opening negotiations with hackers in full public view, a burgeoning tactic across the crypto industry.

The Kronos heist unfolded in mid-November after the hacker managed to obtain the company’s API keys, the digital passes that allowed access to treasury accounts. The attacker made off with $25 million, the bulk in stablecoins like USDT and USDC.

KronosResearch was attacked and lost ~$25.65M, including 24.57M $USDT, 488.7 $ETH($959K) and 125,056 $USDC.

24.57M $USDT was swapped to 12,457 $ETH and 125,056 $USDC was swapped to 63.6 $ETH.

All 13,010 $ETH was transferred to 7 wallets, of which 1 $ETH to #ChangeNOW. pic.twitter.com/FztcM8YZHS

— Lookonchain (@lookonchain) November 19, 2023

“Despite it being a sizable amount, Kronos remains in good standing,” the firm reassured clients about the financial hit. But hunting down the stolen crypto could prove tricky without the hacker’s cooperation.

So Kronos took the route of other crypto victims by appealing directly to the perpetrator. Its offer, broadcast via an on-chain message, promised no further action if 90% of funds are returned. Now the firm must wait and see if the hacker takes the deal.

Public crypto negotiations have become increasingly common in recent years. When decentralized exchange KyberSwap suffered an exploit, the attacker signaled a willingness to talk by signing one of the transactions. KyberSwap began with a 10% bounty offer – the same percentage dangled by Kronos.

Industry-wide, over $1.2 billion has been stolen from decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols in 2022 through hacks and thefts. With such immense sums vanishing in cyberspace, victims have realized that striking compromises may be the only path to partial recovery.

But the approach is controversial. Critics argue that payoffs simply incentivize more cybercrime down the road. And scofflaw hackers may view bounty offers as a starting point for even larger payouts.

For Kronos investors, however, recovering most of their vanished millions likely overrides debates around long-term implications. And if this attempt fails, the firm insists all losses will be covered internally. Still, the daring public offer represents a new frontier in crypto crime-fighting – and the hacker’s decision could set key precedent.

Editor-in-Chief of Blockonomi and founder of Kooc Media, A UK-Based Online Media Company. Believer in Open-Source Software, Blockchain Technology & a Free and Fair Internet for all.
His writing has been quoted by Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Investopedia, The New Yorker, Forbes, Techcrunch & More. Contact Oliver@blockonomi.com

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
How Omicron Is Rattling the Return to the Workplace thumbnail

How Omicron Is Rattling the Return to the Workplace

As the Covid-19 pandemic nears its two-year anniversary, it's distressingly clear that businesses need to prepare for ongoing surges and new variants. Earlier this week, the U.S. reported a record number of daily Covid-19 cases, with more than one million new infections, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. While that one-day record may reflect the lack of tracking during the holidays,…
Read More
Grayscale Bitcoin Trust Discount Hits a New High at 26.5% thumbnail

Grayscale Bitcoin Trust Discount Hits a New High at 26.5%

The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) stock has expanded its discount against the underlying cryptocurrency held in the fund. As a result, on Wednesday, the stock reached a record level of 26.5%. The Outcomes of the Discount Following the discount, investors in the GBTC are exposed to more significant losses. Many institutional investors have long preferred…
Read More
: The 5 most common reasons home buyers get rejected for a mortgage thumbnail

: The 5 most common reasons home buyers get rejected for a mortgage

There are five common reasons that aspiring homeowners are unable to get a mortgage, according to a new report. The top reasons lenders reject mortgage applications include prospective home buyers having a debt-to-income ratio that’s too high, having a low credit score or not having enough money in reserves, according to the report from the
Read More
SA Music Star Tyla Expresses Her Desire for a Date with Rema thumbnail

SA Music Star Tyla Expresses Her Desire for a Date with Rema

South African singing sensation, Tyla Laura Seethal, popularly known as Tyla, recently revealed her wish to go on a date with Nigerian Afrobeats star, Rema.  The revelation came during her interview with Apple Music, where she was candidly asked about her celebrity “prom” date choice. Without a moment’s hesitation, Tyla named Rema as her ideal
Read More
Dow Jones Newswires: Germany consumer confidence expected to improve to six-month high in February thumbnail

Dow Jones Newswires: Germany consumer confidence expected to improve to six-month high in February

Confidence among German consumers is set to improve in February for a fourth straight month, helped by better expectations for the economy and personal finances amid lower energy prices and easing concerns of a recession. Germany’s forward-looking consumer-sentiment index forecasts confidence to increase to minus 33.9 in February from minus 37.6 in January, its highest
Read More
Covid site operating procedures revised thumbnail

Covid site operating procedures revised

Version 9 of the Site Operating Procedures has been produced in response to the Omicron variant, to keep the guidance up to date. Version 9 incorporates the following key changes: a revised introduction to recognise that working with COVID-19 is now ‘business as usual’ for the industry; appropriate language to reflect the current situation on…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share