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Crypto wallet security

Fireblocks discloses massive vulnerability affecting crypto wallets

Fireblocks said the vulnerabilities affecting Coinbase, Binance, and Zengo have since been fixed and has reached out to more than 12 others still at risk.

Over 15 widely-used crypto wallet providers and projects have gaping vulnerabilities that could potentially see millions of crypto wallets drained, according to digital asset infrastructure firm Fireblocks.

In an Aug. 9 press release, Fireblocks said the series of vulnerabilities, dubbed BitForge, are affecting wallets using multi-party computation (MPC) technology, which allows for multiple parties to control and manage cryptocurrency holdings.

The identified issues were disclosed as “zero day” vulnerabilities — meaning that the flaws had not previously been identified by the projects.

“If left unremediated, the exposures would allow attackers and malicious insiders to drain funds from the wallets of millions of retail and institutional customers in seconds, with no knowledge to the user or vendor.”

The firm disclosed that the BitForge vulnerabilities affected many of the top wallet providers, including Coinbase, Zengo and Binance. Following an industry-standard “90 day disclosure period” from Fireblocks, the three firms have since resolved the identified issues.

In a statement, Coinbase chief information security officer Jeff Lunglhofer thanked Fireblocks for identifying and responsibly disclosing the issue, adding that Coinbase customers and funds were never at risk. Zengo CTO Tal Be'ery noted that the issue was promptly fixed and no user funds were affected.

Fireblocks said it has worked to identify other firms that may be implicated in similar security concerns and have reached out to them.

MPC wallets encrypt a user’s private key and share it between several parties — typically comprised of the wallet owner, a wallet provider, and another third party. Theoretically, no one of these entities should be able to unlock the wallet without first communicating with the others.

Related: Tel Aviv Stock Exchange to offer crypto services via Fireblocks pact

However, according to Fireblocks’ technical reports on the BitForge vulnerabilities, the vulnerabilities would have allowed hackers to “extract the full private key if they were able to compromise only one device.”

“While we are encouraged to see that MPC is now ubiquitous within the digital asset industry, it is evident from our findings — and our subsequent disclosure process — that not all MPC developers and teams are created equal,” said Fireblocks CTO and co-founder Pavel Berengoltz.

“Companies leveraging Web3 technology should work closely with security experts with the know-how and resources to stay ahead of and mitigate vulnerabilities,” he added.

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Crypto wallets combat scammers with transaction previews and blocklists

New features aimed at protecting users come amid recent crypto thefts and phishing attacks targeted at well-known crypto executives and influencers.

United States-based crypto exchange Coinbase has become the latest crypto wallet provider to roll out transaction previews and blocklists amid a rise in crypto thefts.

On Jan. 30, the crypto exchange announced it had integrated a new suite of safety features to its wallet app to make it easier for users to spot and take action on potential foul play from scammers.

Such integrations include a transaction preview feature which gives the user an estimation of how users “token and NFT balances will change” during a transaction before the confirm button is hit.

Transaction preview: Coinbase

The firm has also rolled out token approval alerts, which make it clear to the user when a decentralized application dApp is requesting approval to withdraw tokens and nonfungible tokens (NFTs).

Additionally the firm has also introduced new layers of permission management that enable users to revoke dApp connections directly from the app to help minimize “exposure to potential vulnerabilities.”

The crypto exchange joins the ranks of several other crypto wallet providers that have either rolled out or announced similar features aimed at combating crypto scams and phishing attacks, including Solana-based Phantom,  Web3 wallet provider Ember and Bitski.

Just two days after Moonbirds creator Kevin Rose admitted to losing $1.1 million in NFTs via a targeted phishing attack, Phantom reminded users on Jan. 27 that its wallets are protected with a number of security features which include transaction previews, an open source blocklist, NFT spam reporting and burning.

The firm explained its transaction preview feature: "when you take an action in Phantom, like minting an NFT, we scan your transaction and proactively find anything that looks fishy. Website looks fishy? You get a warning. Trying to obfuscate code? Warning. Interacting with suspicious tokens? Warning.”

While the open-source blocklist consists of a “community-maintained list of malicious domains” that Phantom blocks users from mistakenly connecting with.

Tweeting on the same day as Phantom, Web3 wallet provider Ember detailed the list of its own security tools.

The list includes translation previews, token and NFT locking to stop assets being drained as part of malicious transactions, and approvaling revoking.

On Jan. 24, Bitski also indicated that it was working on similar integrations via its 2.0 wallet, with product designer Jasmine Xu noting that this will cover “self custody, dapp browser, transaction simulation previews, notifications about account activity, in-app burner vault, and a bunch more in a few weeks.”

Related: 5 sneaky tricks crypto phishing scammers used last year: SlowMist

In its most recent blog post, Coinbase said in the coming weeks, the firm will launch a feature so that users can “view and revoke existing token balances.”

These types of features are important for crypto and NFT users, as scammers/hackers deploy a wide array of tools to hijack transactions and get funds sent to them instead of the originally intended destination.

Popular methods that dupe even experienced users consist of phishing attacks, scam airdrops directing people to click on malicious links and malware.

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