New theft in ethereum: $ 475,000 for a puzzle failure
Table of contents:
It is already becoming commonplace. Thefts on Ethereum. The second most important cryptocurrency has been suffering various thefts for a while. The new robbery has been possible through the Enigma Project platform. Thanks to that ruling, they have been able to take $ 475, 000.
New Ethereum theft: $ 475, 000 for an Enigma glitch
Enigma is one of the most popular cryptocurrency investment platforms. On Monday, several irregularities were detected on the platform. The person or people who carried out the attack used a newsletter and Slack to spam the platform. And users were invited to pre-purchase Ethereum. In this way they have managed to deceive people and that they send money to the false address.
Theft on Ethereum
This scam has allowed thieves to grab around $ 475, 000 on Ethereum. Although, at the moment it is not known how they have managed to access the servers. In fact, there are still many doubts about it. And what has been the main failure in Enigma. For this to be possible.
What they have wanted to clarify from Enigma is that the personal and bank details of the users are not in danger. Something that will surely be a good relief for all users of this platform. Neither money nor passwords are in danger.
New theft on Ethereum. About two million dollars have already been stolen in Ethereum in two months, so the security of the second most popular virtual currency remains in question. We will see if security measures are announced and if the origin of the failure is discovered this time. Meanwhile, Enigma is expected to announce whether or not the victims will be rewarded.
Devil's ivy: failure detected in security cameras
Devil's Ivy: Bug detected in security cameras. Find out more about this vulnerability that affects security cameras.
Theft of $ 8.4 million from Ethereum
Another 8.4 million theft this week with the cryptocurrency Ethereum. Quite crazy considering that a week ago they had two robberies.
Intel officially responds to the failure in its processors
Intel has come out to respond in recent hours with a statement denying almost everything, but confirms that the security flaw exists. Next, we quote verbatim what Intel says.