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Consolation payment from hacker to person who lost 71 million worth of crypto Last Friday, the hacker paid a refund of 14 million dollars to the person who lost 1155 #WBTC worth 71 million dollars after the trap was set. It is unknown whether the attacker will send any more of the remaining money. While one of the biggest fraudulent link attacks, which has been seen recently in the cryptocurrency world, occurred last week, an interesting payback came from the hacker. Today, the hacker who stole the assets paid a refund of $14 million to the person who lost 1155 WBTC worth $71 million on Friday. The hacker sent a total of 4676 #ETH back to the victimized crypto investor in pieces. As it is known, traps prepared for user negligence have started to increase in the cryptocurrency world recently. In the example here, the victim user wanted to send 1155 WBTC to an address he created. This address was visible in the transaction history of the user who initially sent 0.05 ETH to the account. However, the hacker who followed this person created another similar address by making the letters at the beginning and end the same. The hacker sent nearly 0 ETH to the victim's account and thus entered his transaction history. The fact that the beginning and end of the addresses were generally visible in the transaction history caused the person to be surprised. As a result, this person actually sent all his WBTC not to the address he sent 0.05 ETH to, but to the very similar (but not identical) address that appeared above it. If this person had checked all the letters of the addresses, this situation would not have happened to him. The copy/paste style transaction caused a loss of $71 million. $BTC $ETH #ETFvsBTC #ETHETFS #MicroStrategy #BTC

Consolation payment from hacker to person who lost 71 million worth of crypto

Last Friday, the hacker paid a refund of 14 million dollars to the person who lost 1155 #WBTC worth 71 million dollars after the trap was set. It is unknown whether the attacker will send any more of the remaining money.

While one of the biggest fraudulent link attacks, which has been seen recently in the cryptocurrency world, occurred last week, an interesting payback came from the hacker.

Today, the hacker who stole the assets paid a refund of $14 million to the person who lost 1155 WBTC worth $71 million on Friday. The hacker sent a total of 4676 #ETH back to the victimized crypto investor in pieces.

As it is known, traps prepared for user negligence have started to increase in the cryptocurrency world recently. In the example here, the victim user wanted to send 1155 WBTC to an address he created. This address was visible in the transaction history of the user who initially sent 0.05 ETH to the account. However, the hacker who followed this person created another similar address by making the letters at the beginning and end the same.

The hacker sent nearly 0 ETH to the victim's account and thus entered his transaction history.

The fact that the beginning and end of the addresses were generally visible in the transaction history caused the person to be surprised. As a result, this person actually sent all his WBTC not to the address he sent 0.05 ETH to, but to the very similar (but not identical) address that appeared above it.

If this person had checked all the letters of the addresses, this situation would not have happened to him. The copy/paste style transaction caused a loss of $71 million.

$BTC $ETH

#ETFvsBTC #ETHETFS #MicroStrategy #BTC

Disclaimer: Includes thrid-party opinions. No financial advice. May include sponsored content. See T&Cs.
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Big development in FTX: The Cost Of Bankruptcy Is Astounding. While FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried's case ends pending appeal, FTX's bankruptcy continues. In the latest update from the FTX estate under CEO John Ray III, the company has transferred its remaining shares in Anthropic, the artificial intelligence startup behind chatbot Claude, according to the company's latest bankruptcy filing. #FTX sold the remaining 15 million shares for approximately $30 each, generating over $450 million in proceeds. This brings the total return on FTX's $500 million investment in the company to approximately $1.3 billion, or $800 million in profit. The price per share for this second sale was the same as the first sale in March. The largest buyer of this round, global venture capital fund G Squared, purchased approximately one-third of the remaining shares (4.5 million) for $135 million. Venture capital funds also made up the majority of the other 20 buyers of Anthropic shares. Following the latest filings from the bankruptcy estate, the cost of the #FTX bankruptcy exceeded $500 million in legal and administrative fees. #FTX creditors complained that Sullivan and Cromwell, the primary law firm responsible for FTX's bankruptcy, was also one of the firms that represented FTX before the bankruptcy; this was a potential conflict of interest that led to the appointment of an independent auditor and class officer. An analysis by the New York Times last year found that law firms were charging hundreds of millions of dollars in fees for the bankruptcies of crypto companies. FTX #CEO John Ray has billed the estate $5.6 million since the lawsuit began, based on his $1,300 hourly wage. The entity plans to repay 98 percent of its creditors at least 118 percent of the allowable claims, measured in dollar value, at the time the exchange filed for bankruptcy. #Megadrop #StartInvestingInCrypto #MtGox #ETHETFsApproved #MicroStrategy
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