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Kraken Crypto Exchange Plans To Delist Monero in Two European Countries in Two Months

Kraken Crypto Exchange Plans To Delist Monero in Two European Countries in Two Months

One of the biggest centralized crypto exchange platforms in the world is planning on delisting a popular privacy-focused altcoin in two European nations in the coming months. In a new article, crypto exchange Kraken says it’s going to be delisting Monero (XMR), a blockchain focused on anonymity that launched in 2014, from Ireland and Belgium […]

The post Kraken Crypto Exchange Plans To Delist Monero in Two European Countries in Two Months appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Breaking: Some Multichain transactions are confirmed as queue unwinds

Prior to November 1, the last transactions has taken place more than 117 days ago, according to Multichain's explorer tool.

Hacked cross-chain protocol Multichain has confirmed some transactions, and its backlog of queued transactions has declined to only a single transaction, according to data from Multichain's explorer tool. Blockchain data confirms that some of the transactions have been confirmed on the destination chain, while others show as confirmed in the Multichain explorer but not on the destination chain.

Browsers with the Metamask wallet extension currently show a warning when users attempt to view the Multichain explorer, due to the fact that the protocol has been hacked. However, it can be viewed with a browser that does not have a Web3 wallet installed. Cointelegraph does not recommend connecting to Multichain with a wallet app, and the site itself may also be unsafe.

The transactions appear to be coming from a small number of addresses, indicating that they may be an attempt by the attacker to move funds or else part of a recovery effort by the team. As of 9:30 pm UTC, only a single transaction is listed as pending on Multichain's explorer.

According to the Multichain block explorer, transactions started confirming at approximately 9 am on November 1.

Multichain confirmations on November 11, 2023. Source: Multichain.org.

Some transactions have been confirmed on the destination chain. For example, a deposit of approximately 20 DAI was made from Ethereum to Avalanche, which was confirmed on Avalanche at 1:56 pm UTC. However, a deposit of 0.1 BTC that was made from Ethereum to Polygon at 2:44 shows as confirmed on the Multichain block explorer but has not been confirmed on Polygon.

Blockchain analytics platform Cyvers detected the resumption of transactions in the morning, and posted the info to X (formerly Twitter).

Some of the sending accounts show multiple transactions on November 1, indicating that the sender was confidant that the protocol would work correctly.

Caption: A single account on Ethereum making multiple deposits to Multichain on November 1. Source: Etherscan.

This is a developing story, and further information will be added as it becomes available.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: BTC Sees Subdued Trading Amid Bearish Signals

THORSwap goes into ‘maintenance mode’ to counter illicit funds movement

THORSwap acknowledged the ongoing illicit use of the DEX and are acting to find a permanent block to the misuse.

THORSwap, a decentralized exchange (DEX) powered by multichain THORChain, has entered maintenance mode to prevent bad actors from moving illicit funds through the platform.

On Oct. 6, THORSwap transitioned into “maintenance mode” as an immediate measure to counter the potential movement of illicit funds. The decision comes after consultation with advisors, legal counsel, and law enforcement, according to the original announcement.

Bad actors often use cross-chain platforms like THORSwap to move funds across multiple blockchains, making them untraceable. THORSwap has acknowledged the ongoing predicament and decided to find a permanent block to the misuse.

“THORSwap will remain in this (maintenance) mode until a more permanent and robust solution can be implemented to ensure the platform’s continued security and integrity.”

While most of the community did not welcome the decision to temporarily pull the plug on the platform, the move was attributed to the DEX’s intent to serve its customers for the long term. The company shared no further information on the ongoing investigations and remediation plans. 

THORSwap did not respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.

Related: Binance to shut down BUSD lending by October 25

While THORChain works toward strengthening its security measures before restarting its services, decentralized finance (DeFi) lending protocol Yield Protocol announced the decision to permanently shut down.

Yield Protocol’s upcoming shutdown was accredited to the lack of business demand and rising regulatory pressures.

“All borrowing and lending will end by December 31st,” confirmed Yield Protocol as it announced canceling the March 2024 fixed rate series launch. Unfavorable crypto regulations in the United States, Europe and the United Kingdom became one of the main reasons for Yield Protocol’s untimely shutdown.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: BTC Sees Subdued Trading Amid Bearish Signals

PEPE price to zero? Pepecoin rug-pull allegations put memecoin at risk

Some Pepecoin hopefuls eye a massive PEPE price rebound with on-chain data showing strong accumulation in recent days.

Pepecoin (PEPE), once an extremely profitable memecoin, has plunged by more than 80% four months after its record high. Now, technicals suggest that the memcoin could be at risk of even bigger losses in the coming weeks or months.

Pepecoin faces rug pull allegations

On Aug. 24, several rogue Pepecoin developers changed the number of signatures required to move tokens from their multi-sig wallet from five-out-of-eight to two-out-of-eight. Then, they sent $16 million worth of PEPE to crypto exchanges, suggesting that they wanted to sell.

A segment of market analysts viewed these moves as a hint of an impending “rug pull,” raising fears that the PEPE price may crash to zero in 2023. 

Previous rug pulls, such as MULTI, the native token of Multichain’s cross-chain bridging protocol, has dropped nearly 98% from its peak. The decline has appeared partially due to allegations that Multichain’s $125-million hack in July 2023 was part of a broader rug-pull scam.

Similarly, in July 2023, a crypto developer associated with the Encryption AI project committed a $2-million rug-pull fraud. As a result, the Encryption AI token, 0XENCRYPT, crashed 99% to an all-time low of $0.02.

PEPE’s price paints deadly descending triangle

Market analyst Nebraskangooner suggests that PEPE’s price could soon plunge to nearly zero due to a descending triangle formation on the four-hour chart.

A descending triangle in finance is a bearish continuation pattern characterized by the simultaneous formation of a falling trendline resistance and horizontal trendline support. It resolves after the price decisively breaks below the support and falls by as much as the triangle’s maximum height.

This puts the bearish target for PEPE’s descending triangle at nearly zero.

PEPE hopefuls buy the dip

On a brighter note, some PEPE investors have used the token’s price decline as an opportunity to buy the dip. Notably, the supply held by entities with a balance between 10,000 and 100,000 PEPE tokens has jumped substantially since Aug. 27.

PEPE supply distribution. Source: Santiment

This accumulation is underway as Pepecoin hopefuls assert that the market can absorb any further selling pressure from the token devs. 

“The @pepecoineth devs used to hold 6% of the PEPE and sold 16T tokens equaling 4% of the supply,” noted Kenobi, a PEPE investor, adding:

“No other wallet (besides exchanges) holds more than 0.9% of the supply, except the Pepe dev wallet, which now holds 2%. This is long-term bullish for PEPE. SELL THE REMAINING 2%!!!”

Technically, PEPE has been trading near a recognized accumulation area around $0.00000085 that witnessed a 120% price rally during the June–July 2023 session. Thus, chances of a market rebound at this level are high, given PEPE’s oversold relative strength index (RSI).

PEPE/USDT daily price chart. Source: TradingView

If PEPE’s price bounces here, then the next upside target comes to be its 50-day exponential moving average (50-day EMA; the red wave) near $0.00000121 in 2023, up around 45% from the current price levels.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: BTC Sees Subdued Trading Amid Bearish Signals

Top US Crypto Exchange Coinbase Says It Will Axe Trading Support for Multichain (MULTI) and Five Other Altcoins

Top US Crypto Exchange Coinbase Says It Will Axe Trading Support for Multichain (MULTI) and Five Other Altcoins

Leading US-based cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase will suspend trading for the crypto asset of the bridging platform Multichain (MULTI) effective September 6th. The decision comes after Multichain advised its users to stop using its services. Earlier this year, the protocol announced that its team members couldn’t find the project’s CEO, Zhao Jun, amid technical issues. “The […]

The post Top US Crypto Exchange Coinbase Says It Will Axe Trading Support for Multichain (MULTI) and Five Other Altcoins appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: BTC Sees Subdued Trading Amid Bearish Signals

Multichain victims search for answers in $1.5B exploit as new evidence emerges

Chinese police may have busted Multichain in a money laundering investigation, but many questions remain, including its CEO’s alleged fake ID.

On July 14, developers of the $1.5-billion Chinese cross-chain protocol Multichain confirmed users’ worst fears. The protocol’s CEO, identified only as “Zhaojun He,” was arrested by Chinese authorities in Kunming on May 21 after months of repeated denials on official communication channels. Also allegedly arrested was Multichain’s core team, which was operating in Shanghai. 

It was never disclosed why Zhaojun had been arrested or what the charges were. However, evidence suggests that Multichain funds may have been seized as part of an anti-money laundering operation in the context of a greater crackdown on crypto by Chinese authorities. In addition, an alleged fake ID used by the CEO to register Multichain’s operations only draws more questions. 

Multichain co-founder Alfred Xu assured that the development team was doing “just fine” on May 24 | Source: Telegram

Victims demand answers 

Despite their previous assurance of decentralization, the Multichain team revealed that the protocol’s multi-party computation servers and private keys were all under the exclusive control of Zhaojun, which were handed over to police. Without access to such items, the protocol had to shut down, and its team members were nowhere to be found. 

By the time of disclosure on July 14, $1.5 billion in total value locked on Multichain bridge remains inaccessible. An attempt to “rescue” users’ assets earlier that month also resulted in the arrest of Zhaojun’s sister, or so the development team says. Since the arrest began, funds on Multichain have been mysteriously swapped or bridged to unidentified wallets. 

Crypto investor ArkRide, who claims to have over $9,000 stuck in the Multichain protocol, founded a victims group shortly after the incident. The group now has over 300 members. 

ArkRide tells Cointelegraph that when the group formed, the members did not even know the names of key Multichain executives. Subsequently, one member shared a document from the Singapore government’s Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority alleged to be a Multichain business filing. The document lists “He Xiaokun,” a resident of Jiangsu Province, China, as the “Director” of the company. After seeing this document, some allege that “Zhaojun He” is in fact a pseudonym for “He Xiaokun.” (Chinese family names are written first.)

A Singaporean business filing for the principal business entity behind Multichain. Source: Telegram

Several Multichain victims reached out to Chinese embassies and the police in their home countries in an attempt to get further information, but received no response. 

Around the same time as user investigations, they were contacted by the Fantom Foundation, one of the largest users of the Multichain bridge prior to its collapse. Through several Telegram messages, sources at Fantom claimed that it has hired attorneys within China to assist in the recovery process and confirmed Multichain co-founder Zhaojun had been detained by Chinese police. 

“We’ve been gathering info from different parties and have contacted a Chinese law firm to get advice moving forward,” the source also claimed that some of the Multichain funds have been frozen by centralized exchanges and stablecoin issuers and that the foundation is attempting to get these funds distributed to victims. When asked about the possibility of a rug pull, the source wrote: “I do not believe the MC team misappropriated funds.”

On July 14, Fantom co-founder Andre Cronje stated that “Multichain was a big blow” to the network, as much of its total value locked consisted of Multichain derivative stablecoins. Stablecoin issuers Circle and Tether have frozen over $65 million in assets associated with the hack, according to blockchain data.

Cointelegraph reached out to the Fantom Foundation for comments but did not receive a response by the time of publication.

In a conversation with Cointelegraph, freelance content creator PJ Krypto claimed that he has lost a full month’s paycheck from a client as a result of his funds getting stuck inside the Multichain protocol. According to him, this happened on Aug. 1, nearly a month after the team had announced that the protocol should not be used. 

Multichain’s user interface gave no warning that it shouldn’t be used. (Aug. 23, 2023)

After his transfer took an unusually long time, PJ checked Multichain’s block explorer and noticed that it had an abnormally large amount of pending transactions. Alarmed, he then checked the protocol’s social media accounts.

“Nearly, my jaw dropped to the ground when I started reading everything,” he stated, continuing:

“I don’t know, I guess, sometimes, you just kinda get comfortable. You’ve used something before, and it just works. And you get a little lackadaisical, and I think that’s where I got victimized […] the silly thing is, I could have just sent it to a centralized exchange.”

The content creator stated that his paycheck is still stuck in the Multichain protocol. As a result, he has been unable to pay his team for subcontracted work they performed for him in July and will likely have to catch up these payments out of revenue from August. “It was a tough pill for them to swallow. I mean, they have bills, right? And I’m behind now on my bills for my content creation.”

ArkRide lost over $9,000 worth of crypto in Multichain on July 15 under similar circumstances. He expressed relief that his loss from the hack was small and stated that he has met others who fared much worse:

“My amount that I lost on Multichain is not as much as some people that I talked to lost because there were people who lost nearly half a million. I talked to a couple of guys who lost like $100K each, and there were some people who literally couldn’t stand from their beds, they told me they wanted to commit suicide or something like this.”

The investigation continues

The Chinese national ID system reveals concerning information on who is the actual director of Multichain. A Chinese national ID is a 15- or 18-digit number containing an individual’s residing jurisdiction, date of birth and gender.

A query revealed that the individual listed as “He Xiaokun” in Multichain’s Singaporean registration documents was born on May 10, 1955. The same search for “Yang Qiumei,” another director listed on the Multichain registration file, reveals the said individual to have been born on July 20, 1957. Xu Ruduo, the third director of Multichain — possibly referring to co-founder Alfred Xu — registered using a different type of ID. Alfred Xu has been unreachable since the arrest of his colleague.

The ID search query revealed that “He Xiaokun,” an individual listed as a Multichain director, is currently 68 years old and lives in a village in Jiangsu. Source: ID Search

By inspection, Zhaojun appears far too young to fit the profile of either “He Xiaokun,” age 68, or Yang Qiumei, 66. Both individuals had been indicated as residing in the same address at a rural Chinese village. 

A photo of Zhaojun circulated during his participation in the crypto project Fusion, circa 2017, and was previously his profile picture of his official Twitter account. Dejun Qian, co-founder of Fusion, confirmed Zhaojun was in charge of Multichain during the time of the incident. The two were previously involved in a business dispute regarding Multichain, when it was formerly known as Anyswap. 

Zhaojun He as listed in Fusion’s developer team. His biography reads: “More than 10 years of experience in secure Linux R&D. Former technical director of Chinese leading security operating system. Received bachelor of software engineering, Dalian University of Technology.” Source: Fusion

Sources reviewed by Cointelegraph claim that from the very beginning (May 21), Chinese authorities accused Zhaojun of “money laundering” by bridging tainted assets from users via the Multichain protocol. As a result, the police have attempted to seize all protocol assets, user, enterprise or tainted alike, as proceeds of crime. Although some of these seizures were prevented when centralized exchanges or stablecoin issuers froze the funds, the rest have passed into the hands of Chinese authorities, these sources claim.

Wuwei Liang, a former staff member of crypto exchange CoinXP, claims that in 2019, the firm’s entire development team was apprehended by Chinese police, along with the confiscation of protocol funds and shutdown of all relevant operations. Liang Liang, the firm’s CEO, was subsequently charged with operating a “multi-level marketing operation” and a “pyramid scheme,” which could result in the criminal seizure of the projects’ users’ and enterprise’s assets al if convicted. 

During the trial this July, some sources claim that key witnesses and defense attorneys were threatened with legal intimidation. A presiding judge also reportedly stated, “Presumption of innocence until proven guilty” is “not a correct principle” within Chinese law. The trial has been adjourned. 

CoinXP trial participants allegedly being apprehended by police | Source: Liang Liang

In a similar incident on May 29, Chinese crypto exchange BKEX suspended withdrawals citing the need to cooperate with police on charges of “money laundering.” The exchange has not been active since, and, like Multichain, its team members are nowhere to be found. Social channels, too, have gone cold. Its website is also offline. 

Crypto exchange BKEX’s last message to users before halting withdrawals. 

In yet another incident, the entire development team of offshore Hong Kong dollar and Chinese yuan stablecoin issuer Trust Reserve disappeared in May after its office was raided by police. Local sources say that Trust Reserve developers had been detained. Again, the charges are unknown. 

Allegations of corruption

In each of these instances, police have neither informed investors of the charges against protocol developers nor of what process investors can go through to recover their funds. CoinXP’s Liang claims that this is because police are using the legal system as a means of corruption to embezzle investors’ capital for their own benefit: 

“Defense lawyers would persuade the parties and their families [of arrested crypto executive] to comply, shut down servers, hand over [private] keys, and cooperate in pleading guilty, claiming that this will result in leniency. Little do they know that this makes it easy for law enforcement to profit from unlawful conduct, ‘legally’ pushing the parties towards prison and, at the same time, ‘legally’ taking away the digital assets that belong to the users, investors and founding team.”

Whatever the reason, the Chinese government has not yet answered investors’ questions of where the funds have gone and why they have not been returned to users.

Users such as ArkRide, PJ Krypto and others in the “Multichain Scam” group have so far been unable to get answers as to where their hard-earned money went. But one thing is certain: The Multichain exploit will go down as one of the worst crypto hacks of 2023. Across the world, Multichain users’ assets have mysteriously disappeared. Although some of the funds may be recovered, many are still experiencing the trauma it caused them.

Cointelegraph Editor Zhiyuan Sun contributed to this story. 

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USDC issuer Circle launches MPC wallet beta for Ethereum, Polygon, Avalanche

The stablecoin issuer launched a service and API that allows developers to create customized wallets for their users.

USD Coin (USDC) issuer Circle has released a beta version of a multi-party computation wallet (MPC) service, according to an Aug. 8 announcement. The new service will allow developers of DeFi apps, Web3 video games, e-commerce services, and other blockchain applications to create customized wallets specifically for their users. It will be available initially on Ethereum, Avalanche, and Polygon.

MPC wallets are secured by splitting the user's private key into multiple shards and distributing them through a decentralized network. It’s a new wallet technology many Web3 developers have been using. MPC wallets can be accessed via an application programming interface (API), giving them a “Web2 feel” that some developers and users prefer.

According to an explanatory blog post from Circle, the new service will allow developers to “choose the best wallet security and control configurations.” For example, some developers may want to host their own MPC nodes to ensure they are not completely reliant on Circle, while others may want to choose the simpler method of connecting to Circle’s nodes. Developers can also choose to “share transaction signing responsibilities with the users,” allowing them to recover keys if users lose them, or they can make the product noncustodial by requiring users to sign every transaction.

According to Circle co-founder and CEO Jeremy Allaire, the new service is essential in promoting the use of USDC:

“Circle’s Programmable Wallets is part of a new, core pillar of our strategy to advance global, mainstream utility and adoption of digital assets like USDC and public blockchain-based payments[.] This new platform marks the first step for Circle’s Web3 services as we work to ease common pain points for developers[.]"

MPC wallets have faced controversy recently, as the widely used Multichain MPC bridge was hacked on July 7, causing investors to lose over $100 million. The Multichain team later admitted that all MPC shards had been stored on a cloud server under the control of their CEO.

In an emailed statement to Cointelegraph, Circle's senior director of product management Gagan Mac claimed that the new service “is built and maintained in-house, and doesn’t leverage external vendors,” implying that third-party cloud storage systems will not be used. In addition, Gagan stated that “some developers and enterprises may prefer to host an MPC node,” which they will be allowed to do if they wish. Multichain did not allow partners to host their own nodes.

Circle recently stated that the demand for Euro-based stablecoins is heating up and also argued that a Yuan stablecoin will be better than a Chinese CBDC.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: BTC Sees Subdued Trading Amid Bearish Signals

Fantom (FTM) Founder Andre Cronje Says Multichain Hack Was a ‘Big Blow’ to Ethereum Rival’s Ecosystem

Fantom (FTM) Founder Andre Cronje Says Multichain Hack Was a ‘Big Blow’ to Ethereum Rival’s Ecosystem

Fantom (FTM) creator Andre Cronje says that the recent exploit of cross-chain bridge Multichain was a massive setback for the Ethereum (ETH) rival. Writing in the community’s forum, Cronje says that the Fantom team was misled about the true security level of Multichain. Cronje also says that he and his team plan to seek solutions […]

The post Fantom (FTM) Founder Andre Cronje Says Multichain Hack Was a ‘Big Blow’ to Ethereum Rival’s Ecosystem appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Crypto lender Geist Finance shuts down permanently over Multichain hack

The $29 million TVL lending platform is shutting down because its oracles are misreporting Multichain token values after the exploit.

Lending protocol Geist Finance is shutting down permanently due to losses from the Multichain exploit, according to a July 14 social media post from the app’s development team. Geist contracts were paused on July 6, then resumed in “withdraw and repay only” mode on July 9. The latest post confirms the team does not plan to reopen lending and borrowing on Geist.

Geist is a lending protocol running on the Fantom network. It had over $29 million worth of crypto assets locked in its contracts before the Multichain hack. Before the hack, Geist allowed users to borrow, lend or use bridged tokens from the Multichain platform as collateral, including bridged versions of USD Coin (USDC), Tether (USDT), Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH). It used Chainlink oracles to track the prices of these assets to determine their collateral and loan values.

According to the post, these oracles have stopped producing reliable information. They are now listing the values of the non-bridged, or “real,” versions of each coin, which are more than four times the value of their Multichain derivatives, as the team explained:

“Because Chainlink oracles are tracking the value of real USDC, USDT, WBTC or ETH, they are not aware of the real value of Multichain assets. Those assets are currently trading at around 22% of their real value.”

This makes it “impossible” to reenable lending, as doing so would result in bad debt for holders of non-Multichain coins such as Magic Internet Money (MIM) or Fantom (FTM), the team stated. As a result, Geist will not be able to reopen.

Related: Circle, Tether freezes over $65M in assets transferred from Multichain

Geist Finance interface in “withdraw and repay only” mode. Source: Geist Finance

The team clarified it is not blaming Chainlink oracles for Geist’s closure, as these oracles “worked as they should.” Instead, “Nobody is to blame except @MultichainOrg here.”

Blockchain analytics experts first reported the Multichain hack on July 7. Over $100 million had been withdrawn from the Ethereum side of Multichain bridges, including those for Dogechain, Fantom and Moonriver. The Multichain team called the transactions “abnormal” and warned users to stop using the protocol. However, the team stopped short of calling it a hack or exploit.

On July 11, on-chain sleuth and Twitter user Spreek reported that an unknown individual was draining funds from the protocol and sending them to fresh wallet addresses using a fee-based exploit.

On July 14, the Multichain team confirmed that the withdrawals from July 7 had been the result of a hack. The network had been storing all shards of its private keys in a “cloud server account” under the sole control of the team’s CEO, who was arrested by Chinese authorities. This cloud server account was later accessed by someone and used to drain funds from the protocol. The team previously stated in the protocol’s documents that no single server had access to all of the shards of a key.

According to the July 14 post, the July 11 fee-based attack was a counter-exploit initiated by the CEO’s sister at the behest of the Multichain team in an attempt to recover funds. The sister was later arrested, and the status of the assets she recovered is “uncertain.”

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Multichain stops operations over lack of funds

The Multichain team said that the team’s funds and access to servers are currently with their CEO Zhaojun who is under Chinese police custody.

Cross-chain router protocol Multichain has announced that it is "forced to cease operations" because of the lack of operational funds. The announcement follows a report from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis saying that withdrawals appear to be a “rug pull” by insiders. 

On July 14, Multichain’s official Twitter account announced that it will be finally halting its operations. The team said that a “lack of alternative sources of information and corresponding operational funds” has forced them to shut down their business activities.

In the tweet, the team also highlighted that the global Multichain team has not had contact with their CEO, known as “Zhaojun,” since he was detained by Chinese police. According to the team, they've contacted the CEO's family and learned that Zhaojun's computers, phones, wallets and mnemonic phrases were seized by the authorities. They wrote: 

“Since the inception of the project, all operational funds and investments from investors have been under Zhaojun's control. This also means that all the team's funds and access to the servers are with Zhaojun and the police.”

They added that Zhaojun’s sister notified the team of an asset preservation act, transferring some funds to addresses under her control. However, this was followed by the Multichain CEO’s family notifying the team that Zhaojun’s sister was also taken into custody by the police and is now out of contact. As a result, the team announced that it’s now halting its operations.

Related: Multichain Executor has been ‘draining’ AnySwap tokens: Report

The Multichain debacle started in May when Multichain routes were suspended due to an upgrade, and fund transfers started taking longer than expected. Following this, crypto exchange Binance halted deposit and withdrawal support for some Multichain bridged tokens because of the uncertainties surrounding the protocol.

To make matters worse for the platform, large outflows from the Multichain MPC bridge platform sparked fears of an exploit. On July 6, on-chain observers concluded that the protocol was hacked as over $100 million worth of assets were withdrawn from its Fantom bridge on the Ethereum side.

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