Comment by chabes
4 months ago
From the article:
> The wallet in question appears to have sent 401,346 ETH ($1.1 billion) as well as several other iterations of staked ether (stETH) to a fresh wallet, which is now liquidating mETH and stETH on decentralized exchanges, etherscan shows. The wallet has sold around $200 million worth of stETH so far.
If you showed me a paragraph like this a decade ago and told me it was from 2025, I would have a difficult time believing you.
Crypto shenanigans were happening in 2015, even as far back as 2010, so I would have to absolutely believed you to hear that it continues happening, as crypto is a fundamentally unstable platform.
I think he means the sheer volume
Mt. Gox (a former crypto exchange) was hacked in 2014 and the thieves stole nearly half a billion dollars in BTC. Considering how much more the currency is worth today and how much bigger the markets are, it seems like Bybit got off easy in terms of sheer volume.
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Just crazy. Bank heists fully online...
It's a cold wallet which means it should never be connected to the internet, so not entirely online, but yes - these are the wild wild west times of the internet. Imagine how easy it was to go into a bank shoot some people and get out with money, and doing it like, daily? monthly? Today it's not possible.
Apparently there was a path from the internet to the wallet anyway, that's what it sounds like.
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It's definitely embarrassing that people losing their shirts in crypto didn't see it coming. It's bad that people think a zero sum game is worth playing against incumbents. The marks aren't the worst part, though. Everyone promoting memecoins and utility-free cryptocurrency in general is either ignorant or just a bad person with a warped idea of success. Personal money accumulation is a sad goal compared to actual wealth creation. The parasites who push crypto on the hopeful proto-bag holders are destroying the prosperity that supports them.
Yeah on memecoins isn’t that just a loophole for running naked pyramid schemes? I.e. a pyramid where everyone knows it’s a pyramid.
Like the weird part about a pyramid is that depending on your risk tolerance it may actually make sense to participate in a pyramid even if everyone involved knows it’s a pyramid. So are that many people being scammed as in tricked (seems hard to believe), or is it just a risky form of gambling that is outlawed in legacy formats.
EDIT: Ponzi -> Pyramid
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> memecoins and utility-free cryptocurrency
As opposed to what?
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It was an offline multi-sig wallet. Hackers seem to have musked the transaction when the owners signed it as it looked good to them.
Wow it must have been really musked then, huh?
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And only a few weeks ago the lawsuit started payout the 'early lump sum' repayment option for creditors.
"Bybit CEO Ben Zhou wrote on X that a hacker "took control of the specific ETH cold wallet and transferred all the ETH in the cold wallet to this unidentified address."
From the article. Not that I endorse crypto, in fact I despise it. But at least per this statement, it seems to have been handled offline. How a hacker could get access to this is another story to unpack.
edit: I guess this is the story that "unpacks". One more reason to not believe in crypto.
https://x.com/benbybit/status/1892963530422505586
By "online wallet" they were likely referring to the Bybit website being the wallet of those customers that held their coins there rather than keeping them in their own private wallets, and not whether the hack involved a hot wallet or a cold wallet. Calling it a custodial wallet would have been more accurate.