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How These Whitehat Hackers Helped Oasis Network Get Back $140 Million In Stolen Crypto
According to a recent announcement by Oasis Network on February 24th, the decentralized finance (DeFi) platform had collaborated with whitehat hackers to recover funds that had been stolen from Solana’s Wormhole bridge.
On February 2nd, Wormhole had been hacked, and it was estimated that around $326 million worth of cryptocurrency had been stolen, with the attacker later transferring some of these funds.
Wormhole connects Solana to other leading DeFi (decentralized financial infrastructure) networks. As a result of Solana’s high speed and cheap cost, tokenized assets can be transferred between blockchains without disrupting ongoing projects, platforms, or communities.
The Wormhole Network exploiter has been busy over the past weeks. The hacker, who transferred $150 million worth of stolen assets in January, has redistributed more funds on Feb. 12, according to PeckShield.
Ethical Hackers To The Rescue
Oasis, the developer of the multi-signature wallet software into which the hacker placed funds, revealed in a blog post that whitehats just alerted them to “a previously unknown weakness in the design of the admin multisig access.”
Now, in response to a February 21 ruling from the High Court of England and Wales, it exploited this flaw to recover the cash.
In order to accomplish this, Oasis decided to collaborate with a group of ethical hackers known as “white hats,” who on February 16 had suggested a method for recovering the stolen assets.
On Tuesday, the two groups put the plan into action and delivered the recovered assets to a third party that had been permitted by the court.
“We can also confirm the assets were immediately passed onto a wallet controlled by the authorized third party, as required by the court order,” the announcement reads.
“We retain no control or access to these assets,” Oasis Network added in the blog post.
White Hat Vs. Black Hat Hackers
When it comes to protecting networks, white hat hackers are the ones to call. Hackers that figuratively wear so-called white hats deliberately seek for and report security flaws so that they may be patched before they are exploited in attacks.
Hackers with malicious intentions, sometimes known as “black hats,” are the ones that try to disrupt networks, steal information, or compromise systems.
While Oasis did not reveal the identity of the whitehat hacking group, Blockworks reported that Web3 infrastructure company Jump Crypto may have been behind the recovery effort.
The report also suggested that after costs, $140 million worth of assets had been recovered.
Meanwhile, the project emphasized that user funds had never been at risk and that they could have patched any reported vulnerabilities.
The use of a questionable method to recover stolen assets may be controversial and could be challenged by decentralization advocates who argue that blockchain should provide individuals with sole control over their assets.
-Featured image from Pea Soup Digital