Mixin Network hack drains $200M from mainnet assets


Mixin Network hack drains 0M from mainnet assets


Mixin Network suspended all deposits and withdrawals and will restart the services “once the vulnerabilities are confirmed and fixed.”

Decentralized peer-to-peer network Mixin Network has lost approximately $200 million in a hack involving the compromise of the database of a third-party cloud service provider.

On Sept. 25, Mixin Network confirmed that a hack conducted two days ago — on Sept. 23 — drained approximately $200 million worth of crypto assets from its mainnet. An immediate suspension of all deposit and withdrawal services on Mixin Network followed the revelation.

Mixin Network appointed blockchain investigator SlowMist as well as Google to help investigate the hack as the Mixin team attempts a recovery. At the time of the hack, Mixin held $94.48 million in Ether (ETH), $23.55 million in DAI (DAI) and $23.3 million in Bitcoin (BTC), according to a separate investigation conducted by PeckShield. The total portfolio amounted to $141.32 million.

Mixin Network portfolio of $141.32 million. Source: PeckShield

Deposits and withdrawals on Mixin Network will recommence “once the vulnerabilities are confirmed and fixed.” The plans to recover the lost assets for users were not announced immediately.

While it was initially promised that Mixin founder Feng Xiaodong would explain this incident in a public Mandarin live stream at 1:00 AM ET (1:00 PM HKT) on Sept 25, links to the live stream were not provided on official social media channels such as X (formerly Twitter) or its official website mixin.network.

Mixin Network did not respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment at the time of writing.

Related: Remitano exchange hacked for $2.7M; $1.4M frozen by Tether

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin recently suffered a hack that compromised his social media profile on X.

Vitalik Buterin confirms how his X account was accessed by hackers. Source: Warpcast

Buterin confirmed that he fell victim to a SIM swap attack after “someone socially-engineered T-mobile itself to take over my phone number.” SIM swap or simjacking attacks aim to control the victim’s mobile number and use two-factor authentication (2FA) to access social media, bank, and crypto accounts.

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