Euler Money was hacked on Walk 13, 2023, and around $197 million worth of digital currency was taken, including $135.8 million stETH, $33.8 million USDC, $18.5 million WBTC, and $8.7 million DAI.
The London, Britain based decentralized loaning stage Euler Money had offered a $1 million prize to any individual who could uncover the programmer's character.
The programmer who took assets from Euler Money, a decentralized loaning stage that empowers clients to get or loan any digital currency, has consented to return the taken sum.
As revealed, the programmer returned 100 ETH to an irregular client who professed to have lost their life reserve funds in the hack. The client had mentioned 75 ETH, however the programmer returned more than the mentioned sum.
Be that as it may, it is hazy regardless of whether the client had really lost assets, as the genuineness of their case couldn't be confirmed. Albeit numerous clients requested that the programmer return 90% of the taken assets and keep the leftover 10% as a prize, the programmer didn't conform to these solicitations.
The occurrence shouldn't really shock anyone, there have been comparative reports distributed in which programmers returned taken reserves. Be that as it may, the taken and returned sum in the Euler Money case is to be sure surprising.
The London, Britain based decentralized loaning stage Euler Money had offered a $1 million prize to any individual who could uncover the programmer's character.
The programmer who took assets from Euler Money, a decentralized loaning stage that empowers clients to get or loan any digital currency, has consented to return the taken sum.
As revealed, the programmer returned 100 ETH to an irregular client who professed to have lost their life reserve funds in the hack. The client had mentioned 75 ETH, however the programmer returned more than the mentioned sum.
Be that as it may, it is hazy regardless of whether the client had really lost assets, as the genuineness of their case couldn't be confirmed. Albeit numerous clients requested that the programmer return 90% of the taken assets and keep the leftover 10% as a prize, the programmer didn't conform to these solicitations.
The occurrence shouldn't really shock anyone, there have been comparative reports distributed in which programmers returned taken reserves. Be that as it may, the taken and returned sum in the Euler Money case is to be sure surprising.