Decentralized finance protocol Cream Finance said it will use protocol fees to repay users that lost money during Monday’s attack.
In a postmortem posted on Medium, the Cream Finance team said it is committing one-fifth of protocol fees until affected users have recovered all of their funds.
The protocol will post collateral with the AMP and Flexa teams until the debt is repaid. Affected users are invited to submit a request through a Google form.
Cream also revised its Monday estimate of the hack upwards. It said the hackers drained 462,079,976 AMP tokens and 2,804.96 ether, totaling upwards of $33.5 million.
This is the first time Cream was directly exploited, the post said, probably referring to another attack it suffered earlier this year.
The team has identified a main exploit and a copycat. The latter has withdrawal history on Binance, so Cream is working with the crypto exchange to identify the copycat. The two stole the funds over 17 transactions.
Cream is offering its usual bug bounty: If the hacker or hackers comes forward, they can keep 10% of the stolen funds.
The post confirmed earlier reports that the integration of ERC-777 AMP token contracts in the Cream protocol were the root cause.
While the AMP market integration took place in February, it was only five days before the attack that a big influx of AMP tokens on Cream made the account profitable, according to the blog post.
Cream said it will re-deploy AMP borrowing and lending once the vulnerability has been patched.
Project Agorá, backed by major central banks, will now move toward "real-value" testing to settle tokenized central bank money and bank deposits on blockchain rails.
Lo que debes saber:
Project Agorá, backed by the Bank for International Settlements, found that tokenizing central bank reserves and commercial bank deposits could significantly improve the speed and reliability of payments across borders.
With major central banks like the New York Fed, Bank of England and Bank of Japan involved, members now plan...