Ocean Protocol Forks to Retrieve Tokens Stolen From KuCoin Exchange
On Sunday, Ocean Protocol conducted a hard fork from its old token address to prevent the KuCoin exchange hacker from continued unloading of stolen OCEAN tokens on decentralized exchange Uniswap.
Artificial intelligence and data service Ocean Protocol has suspended its old contract on the Ethereum blockchain and hard-forked its project, following the $150 million KuCoin hack.
On Sunday at 22:00 UTC, Ocean Protocol announced it had migrated from its old token address to a new one to thwart the KuCoin hacker's attempts to offload 21 million OCEAN tokens worth some $8.6 million. According to a Sept. 27 blog post from the Ocean Protocol team:
Moving contract addresses has effectively blacklisted the hacker’s stash of OCEAN tokens. But it also raises questions of the project's true immutability if the protocol can be effectively hard-forked in one weekend.
Prior to the hard fork, the hacker offloaded some 330,000 OCEAN tokens worth $120,000, according to The Block's head of research, Larry Cermak. Ocean Protocol has a liquid supply of 587,622,921 OCEAN tokens with a maximum supply of 1.4 billion OCEAN.
KuCoin hack
Singapore-based KuCoin was hacked Friday beginning at 19:05 UTC. The hacker gained access to the platform’s hot wallet keys, said KuCoin CEO Johnny Lyu in a weekend livestream.
Lyu said the platform intends to cover for hacked losses with insurance funds.
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The Ocean Protocol team did not return questions for comment by press time.