Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Poly network, hacker returns all the stolen cryptocurrencies

Poly network

Poly network reveals that it has received all the stolen cryptocurrencies, according to Poly Network, it has received a text on a blockchain from the hacker so-called Mr. White Hat. Which contained the key to the wallet where the cryptocurrencies were stored. Poly Network said it had secured all of the stolen funds after securing 28,953 ethereum and 1,032 Wrapped Bitcoin (about $141 million).

Earlier, Poly Network publicized that hackers were able to steal much more than the $600 million costs of several cryptocurrencies managed on the Binance Smart Chain, Ethereum, and Polygon blockchains.

After the heist the hacker started to return funds back to the Poly Network team, it received $4.7 million so far as the project’s official Twitter account said.

It has offered the hacker the position of chief security adviser.

It wrote: “To extend our thanks and encourage Mr. White Hat to continue contributing to security advancement in the blockchain world together with Poly Network, we cordially invite Mr. White Hat to be the Chief Security Advisor of Poly Network.”

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Liquid, a Japanese crypto exchange got hacked and faces a loss of $94M

Liquid

After the hack on Poly Network, a Japanese crypto exchange Liquid also got hacked and faces a loss of more than $94 million.

“We are sorry to announce that #LiquidGlobal warm wallets were compromised, we are moving assets into the cold wallet,” it said on Twitter, adding that deposits and withdrawals were suspended.

Liquid later stated that it was tracing the assets’ transfer and collaborating with other exchanges to freeze and restore cash.

“Warm” or “hot” digital wallets are usually web-based and are meant to make it easier for users to access bitcoins. “Cold” wallets are offline and more difficult to access, making them more secure.

Elliptic, a London-based blockchain analysis firm, said the thief’s digital addresses had received more than $94 million in digital currency, including about $31 million in ether, $5 million in bitcoin, and $13 million in XRP.

Elliptic reported that $45 million in tokens related to the Ethereum blockchain were also taken.

The hacker or hackers is converting some of these tokens to the ether cryptocurrency through decentralized – peer-to-peer – exchanges, it added.

Elliptic said it was aiding Liquid in tracking the stolen funds.

Liquid is the new exchange in japan that was majorly hacked.

Liquid operates in more than 100 nations and serves millions of clients globally. It stated.

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Poly network, hacker can become chief security adviser of our company

Poly network

Poly Network, a decentralized finance (DeFi) platform got hacked and faces a loss of $600 million, and now the company has offered the hacker the position of chief security adviser.

The company wrote: “To extend our thanks and encourage Mr. White Hat to continue contributing to security advancement in the blockchain world together with Poly Network, we cordially invite Mr. White Hat to be the Chief Security Advisor of Poly Network.”

DeFi platform stated that by this heist we are able to see gaps of several security vulnerabilities and now we are fixing them, adding that the repair won’t “take place overnight.”

The company said it “has no intention of holding Mr. White Hat legally responsible, as we are confident that Mr. White Hat will promptly return full control of the assets to Poly Network and its users.”

The company said it has offered a “$500,000 bug bounty” to the hacker “to use it at his own discretion for the cause of cybersecurity and supporting more projects and individuals.”

“While there were certain misunderstandings in the beginning due to poor communication channels, we now understand Mr. White Hat’s vision for Defi and the crypto world, which is in line with Poly Network’s ambitions from the very beginning — to provide interoperability for ledgers in Web 3.0,” the company said.

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Binance get order to identify and freeze hackers accounts

Binance

Binance has been ordered by the high court of the UK to investigate the hackers who robbed $2.6 million from Fetch.ai and freeze their accounts.

The amount of money is lesser than the amount compared to the recent hack of Poly Network, it is one of the first public cases involving Binance and will be a litmus test for English courts and their abilities to combat fraud on cryptocurrency platforms

A spokesperson from Binance confirmed that the company was helping Fetch.ai to recover its assets. They went on to say:

“Binance routinely freezes accounts that are identified as having suspicious activity occurring in line with our security policies and commitment to ensuring that users are protected while using our platform.”

Binance warned Fetch.ai that it had seen strange activity on their account. Binance already freezes some of the money for safety, the hacker was able to sell some of the assets, but only for a third of the original amount.

The result of the hack on the Poly network and this case shows that it is becoming extremely hard for hackers to hack into accounts, rob cash, and keep it.

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Poly network, hacker returns $4.7 million to unlock frozen tether stash

Poly network

The decentralized finance (defi) project Poly Network was hacked for over $600 million in digital assets. The attack was the largest hack. The next day, the hacker started to return funds back to the Poly Network team, it received $4.7 million so far as the project’s official Twitter account said.

Following the hack on Poly Network, the team issued a letter to the hacker, requesting that the hacker begin talking with the project’s members. “Law enforcement in any country will regard this as a major crime and you will be pursued,” Poly Network’s letter told.

The hacker apparently sent messages to the Poly Network staff, emphasizing that the hack could have been of lower quality.

The project has seen $4.7 million returned, according to the official Poly Network Twitter account. “So far, we have received a total value of $4,772,297.675 assets returned by the hacker,” Poly Network said. The company also revealed the amount and kind of funds the hacker give back. The returned crypto assets contain, $2,654,946.051 (ETH address), $1,107,870.815 (BSC address) and $1,009,480.809 (Polygon address).

A security company called Slowmist claims that the hacker’s ID was exposed and they have access to the hacker’s email and IP address. The hacker was clever to leverage a comparatively unknown crypto exchange in Asia and they claimed to have a lot of data on the attacker.

Reports show a white hat hacker has been trying to talk with the Poly Network attacker. “We can offer you a security bounty when you return all the remaining assets. We will provide a secure address through email,” the white hat wrote.

He further wrote, “The decision made by DAO can’t change the fact that the assets are stolen from crypto believers. We want to offer a security bounty and we hope it will be remembered as the biggest white hat hack in history.”

In a message sent to team members, the hacker is “ready to return the funds”. The hacker told that the trial “failed to contact the Poly” and “I need a secured multisig wallet from you. It’s already a legend to win so much fortune. It will be an eternal legend to save the world. I made the decision, no more DAO.” The white hat hacker replied, “we are preparing a multi-sig address controlled by known Poly addresses.”

“Accept donations to ‘the hidden signer’ now. Encrypt your msg with his pubkey.” The hacker further said. After this statement, he returns back the amount of 1 million USDC tokens to Poly Network.

“You are moving things [in] the right direction. We received 1+M USDC on Polygon. Did you ask us to encrypt the receiving addresses with your BookKeeper public key?” the white hat hacker asked. The hacker then sent more funds back to the project’s team members. Next, the hacker would ask the team to donate to an address if they supported his decision. The hacker added:

Hacker asked “You are moving things [in] the right direction. We received 1+M USDC on Polygon. Did you ask us to encrypt the receiving addresses with your BookKeeper public key?” More funds were sent by the hacker to the Poly Network’s team members. Hacker further added that if the team members support his decision he would ask the team to provide an address.

“Encrypt your msg with his pubkey if you want to talk. Dumping sh**coins first… How about unlocking my USDT after returning enough USDC?” the white hat hacker said.

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Poly network gets hacked and faces a loss of $600 million

Poly network

Poly Network is decentralized finance (DeFi) firm, which publicized that hackers were able to steal much more than $600 million costs of several cryptocurrencies managed on the Binance Smart Chain, Ethereum, and Polygon blockchains.

This could be one of the biggest cryptocurrency-related heists.

If the total of that $600 million in assets managed on those chains was in fact cooperated. Poly Network didn’t share data about how much was stolen, but it did share the types of cryptocurrency taken by the hackers, CoinDesk reported.

Among those on the list are, Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC), Wrapped Ethereum (WETH), RenBTC, Dai, Uniswap (UNI), Shiba Inu (SHIB), FEI, and USD Coin (USDC).

Poly Network public a list of wallets related to the theft and advised “miners of affected blockchain and crypto exchanges” and also “token issuers” to “blacklist assets coming from” those addresses to avoid the stolen coins from being spent. At least some of those groups, such as Tether, have fulfilled that demand.

According to a study conducted by CipherTrace, Poly Network’s statement came just after Reuters informed that “losses from theft, hacks, and fraud” in the DeFi industry touched “a record $474 million from January to July”. Over the course of a single morning, this hack might have more than doubled those figures.

“HsakaTrades” stated that the hacker is tipping individuals who offer them beneficial info, and showed that many individuals are texting the hacker to toast them on the theft. But then some of those celebrations might have been sudden. Much of the reaction to this hack has played out on Twitter.

Blockchain Security Company called SlowMist claimed to have “tracked down the attacker’s ID” also “their email address, IP information, and device fingerprint”. It didn’t take much time before the hacker pressured them to return what they stole and then were pressed criminal charges for the theft.

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