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Solana ties major hack to wallet provider Slope

Solana ties major hack to wallet provider Slope

An investigation by the Solana team into the hack of thousands of cryptocurrency wallets showed that the addresses touched by the attack were “at some point created, imported, or used in Slope mobile wallet applications”.

Earlier, Solana developers announced that the hack was not caused by a bug in the blockchain’s core code, but by software used by “several popular wallets”.

Co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko wrote that anyone who has ever imported a seed phrase into Slope should consider it compromised.

In a statement, Slope said that a number of the project’s wallets were compromised and the team is actively investigating the incident. The developers ‘have several hypotheses’, but they did not name a specific cause of the breach.

Slope urged all users to create new wallets with different seed phrases and transfer their assets to them.

Phantom project representatives, whose clients were also affected by the breach, said they have reasons to believe that the exploited vulnerability is linked to Slope. They advised users to move assets to new wallets from other providers.

Some experts note that Slope may have stored seed phrases on its centralized servers, which attackers could subsequently compromise.

A Slope spokesperson told CoinDesk that the team does not store “any personal data on a centralized server”. However, he later said that this statement was incorrect.

The investigation continues, Solana emphasised.

As recalled, in early August unknown gained access to the funds of owners of about 8,000 Solana-based wallets and withdrew millions of dollars.

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