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Hacker Steals $100 million Worth of Crypto from Harmony Horizon Bridge

The attack appears to have taken place over the span of 17 hours.

 

Earlier this week, the Horizon bridge linking Harmony – a Layer-1 PoS blockchain designed for native token ONE – to the Ethereum and Binance Chain ecosystem was exploited, resulting in a loss of nearly $100 million in Ethereum. Fortunately, the BTC bridge remained unaffected and has been shut down to prevent further losses. 

The U.S. crypto startup has notified the FBI and requested to assist with an investigation in identifying the culprit and retrieving stolen assets. 

“The Harmony team has identified a theft occurring this morning on the Horizon bridge amounting to approx. $100MM. We have begun working with national authorities and forensic specialists to identify the culprit and retrieve the stolen funds,” the company posted on Twitter. 

“We have also notified exchanges and stopped the Horizon bridge to prevent further transactions. The team is all hands-on deck as investigations continue. We will keep everyone up-to-date as we investigate this further and obtain more information.”

The attack appears to have taken place over the span of 17 hours, starting at about 7:08 am EST until 7:26 am EST. The value of the first transaction was 4,919 ETH, followed by multiple smaller transactions ranging from 911 to 0.0003 ETH. The last one took place after the bridge had been shut down. 

The hack is the latest in a series of exploits affecting the crypto space. So far, Frax (FRAX), Wrapped Ether (wETH). Aave (AAVE), SushiSwap (SUSHI), Frax Share (FXS), AAG (AAG), Binance USD (BUSD), Dai (DAI), Tether (USDT), Wrapped BTC (wBTC), and USD Coin (USDC) have been stolen from the bridge via this exploit. 


Interestingly, a warning was issued by an independent researcher and blockchain developer Ape Dev back on the 2nd of April. In a series of tweets, the researcher warned that the security of the Horizon bridge hinged on a multisignature — or “multisig” — a wallet that required just two signatures to initiate transactions. The hackers could exploit this loophole to execute a very simple attack by getting 2 of the owners to sign off on transfers worth up to $330million. 

The hack adds to a series of negative news in the crypto space lately. Crypto lenders Celsius and Babel Finance put a freeze on withdrawals after a sharp drop in the value of their assets resulted in a liquidity crunch. Meanwhile, crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital could be declared as a defaulter for failing to repay a $660 million loan from brokerage firm Voyager Digital.
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