Remember, code is law. It wasn't stolen, the code has decided that it belongs to the exploiter.
technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
on 08 Aug 2024 15:23
nextcollapse
The fact this is rare and mostly isolated to shitcoins demonstrates the security of more established cryptos (for now).
schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
on 08 Aug 2024 16:07
collapse
It’s funny how this keeps happening, and mostly keeps happening in the same way.
You’d think after the hundredth time it happens people would start fixing it so you can’t simply exploit smart contracts via proxy, but I’m a simple computer janitor so what do I know.
threaded - newest
Remember, code is law. It wasn't stolen, the code has decided that it belongs to the exploiter.
The fact this is rare and mostly isolated to shitcoins demonstrates the security of more established cryptos (for now).
It’s funny how this keeps happening, and mostly keeps happening in the same way.
You’d think after the hundredth time it happens people would start fixing it so you can’t simply exploit smart contracts via proxy, but I’m a simple computer janitor so what do I know.