News emerged last week of yet another security event in the digital currency exchange ecosystem, this time impacting a Hong Kong-based service involved in the sale of assets related to Ethereum-based decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs).
on Friday, Gatecoin experienced a cyberattack on its hot wallets that resulted in the loss of funds. A new update from the exchange team indicated that as much as $2m was lost, confirming rumors that circulated soon after the hack became apparent.
Gatecoin has claimed that it lost as much as 185,000 ethers and 250 bitcoins, an amount worth roughly $2.14m at press time. The exchange further said that it believes the hack first began on 9th May, and that it continued over the following three days.
While details remain unclear – Gatecoin has said that it is conducting an internal review of the incident – the company suggested in a statement on the hack that its process for storing funds offline had also been compromised.
Gatecoin said in a statement:
The timing of the hack was notable given the ongoing crowdsale for TheDAO, an organization using Ethereum-based tokens to vote on and fund development proposals. To date, that effort has raised approximately 10.72m ETH, worth nearly $120m at the time of this writing.
Gatecoin was one of several exchanges offering purchases of those tokens, and in the aftermath of the hack says that it will build a portal for withdrawing DAO-related tokens in the next two weeks, as well as fiat currencies.
No indication was given as to when withdrawals of bitcoin and ethers will be processed.
The Gatecoin incident represents the latest cybersecurity event in the exchange space, following hacks on ShapeShift and Cointrader, among others.
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