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Hackers attacked Uniswap liquidity providers through a fake airdrop

Hackers attacked Uniswap liquidity providers through a fake airdrop

Binance chief Changpeng Zhao said researchers at the exchange had detected a potential vulnerability in Uniswap v3. However, it later emerged that the incident involved a phishing attack against a user, not a vulnerability in the protocol.

In Zhao’s message, it stated that the attacker withdrew 4,295 ETH ($4.6 million at the time of writing) from the protocol and sent them to the Tornado Cash mixer.

PeckShield said that there had been an attack on a liquidity provider (LP).

Security researcher Harry Denley was among the first to report the phishing campaign. He noted that the attackers sent malicious tokens masquerading as an Uniswap airdrop to over 70,000 addresses.

Victims enticed by the tokens are redirected to a fraudulent site. The hackers then steal the funds.

The number of affected users and the total amount of damage remain unknown.

Uniswap protocol founder Hayden Adams confirmed that this was a phishing campaign. He advised not to click on links that may be malicious. 

Changpeng Zhao said he had been in touch with the Uniswap team and confirmed that the protocol is safe.

Some users noted that you should not post unverified claims on Twitter, “especially if you have millions of followers.”

Earlier in 2020, specialists discovered a fake Uniswap app that stole cryptocurrency from users.

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