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Crypto News DeFi Hackers

DeFi Protocol Curve ‘Finance’ Exploited in DNS Spoofing Attack

Curve Finance’s front end this week became the victim of an exploit that ended with a loss of more than US$573,000. Curve took to Twitter to warn its users of the issue with its site, though luckily the spoofing exploit did not affect the Curve exchange:

Exploiting the Curve

On August 9, Twitter user @samczsun alerted the public to the exploit with a tweet that read: “@CurveFinance frontend is compromised, do not use it until further notice!” Despite the Curve team’s quick response to the issue, they were unable to prevent the loss.

The hacker(s) responsible seemingly changed the protocol’s domain name system (DNS), which then allowed them to approve a malicious contract by directing users to a fake clone. In a stroke of luck for Curve, the program’s exchange remained uncompromised, as it utilises a separate DNS provider.

An hour after the initial warning of the exploit, Curve tweeted:

While a significant sum was lost, the quick circulation of information on Twitter regarding the attack on the nameserver and front end may have prevented greater losses.

The Curve decentralised finance (DeFi) protocol is an integral part of the DeFi ecosystem, and exploits such as this prevent other protocols from accessing income sources.

Protocol Exploits Elsewhere

DeFi protocol exploits have proliferated in 2022, with two notable examples occurring in May and June. The first victim was the Fortress protocol, with the crypto borrowing and lending platform losing approximately US$3 million in stolen funds. The Binance Smart Chain (BSC)-based platform had suffered an oracle attack only days prior.

More recently, Terra-based DeFi app Mirror Protocol was the subject of a US$2 million exploit related to Terra blockchain’s recent rebrand to Terra Classic. The exploit almost completely drained the mBTC, mGLXY, mETH, and mDOT pools. Luckily the developers were able to patch the damage before all pools could be drained.

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DeFi Hackers

DeFi Project ‘MM.Finance’ Suffers $2 Million Exploit

MM.Finance, the largest DeFi exchange on Cronos, has lost US$2 million in a recent exploitation by hackers. A Domain Name System (DNS) vulnerability is believed to be responsible, with the stolen funds being sent to Tornado Cash:

As per its tweet, MM.Finance traced the perpetrator of the cyberattack back to OKX centralised exchange. The funds stolen in the frontend breach were bridged to Ethereum using Multichain and deposited into Tornado Cash. OKX requires users to go through a ‘know your customer’ procedure, therefore the attacker had to have used fake IDs when signing up for the exchange.

While MM.Finance intends to compensate the affected addresses, the exchange has said that if 90 percent of the funds are not returned to MM.Finance within 48 hours, it will contact the FBI:

DeFi Exploits Increasing

Early April saw DeFi lender Inverse Finance suffer a US$15.6 million exploitation. The decentralised Ethereum protocol was compromised by hackers targeting its money market through the artificial manipulation of its token prices.

And, only days ago, Rari Capital lost US$80 million to hackers following a Fei protocol exploit. The assets had been held in Fuse lending pools, apparently the fault of a reentrancy vulnerability.