1. Home
  2. Coin Telegraph
  3. Hacker mints 1 quadrillion yUSDT after exploiting old Yearn.finance contract
Hacker mints 1 quadrillion yUSDT after exploiting old Yearn.finance contract

Hacker mints 1 quadrillion yUSDT after exploiting old Yearn.finance contract

0

Source: Coin Telegraph

The hacker has already transferred 1,000 Ether ($2 million) to the crypto mixer Tornado Cash.

Blockchain security firm PeckShield recently detected a hack that allowed the attacker to mint over 1 quadrillion Yearn Tether (yUSDT) from $10,000 in the latest decentralized finance (DeFi) exploit. 

According to the security firm, the hacker then swapped the yUSDT to other stablecoins, allowing them to take hold of $11.6 million worth of stablecoins. This includes 61,000 Pax Dollar (USDP), 1.5 million TrueUSD (TUSD), 1.79 million Binance USD (BUSD), 1.2 million Tether (USDT), 2.58 million USD Coin (USDC) and 3 million Dai (DAI).

PeckShield illustrates the flow of funds from the attack. Source: PeckShield

PeckShield said that the hacker has already managed to transfer 1,000 Ether (ETH), currently worth almost $2 million, to the sanctioned cryptocurrency mixer Tornado Cash. The blockchain security company also flagged the DeFi protocols Aave and Yearn.finance to inform them of what was transpiring. 

Related: Sentiment recovers $870K after negotiations with hacker

After initial checks, lending platform Yearn.finance made a statement, saying the issue was limited to iearn, an outdated contract before vaults v1 and v2. The DeFi protocol stated that the current Yearn.finance contracts and protocols are not affected by the exploit.

Meanwhile, Aave also said they are aware of the transaction. The liquidity protocol recently confirmed that the hack did not impact Aave v1, v2 or v3. 

While hacks still plague the DeFi space in 2023, the amount of money lost to hacks has been lower compared with previous years. According to a quarterly report by blockchain security firm CertiK, more than $320 million were lost to hacks in the first quarter of 2023. The losses were much lower compared with 2022’s first quarter, where $1.3 billion was lost, and the fourth quarter when $950 million was lost to hacks.

Magazine: US enforcement agencies are turning up the heat on crypto-related crime

Go to Source
Author: Ezra Reguerra