In a recent report, the decentralized finance (DeFi) platform Delta Prime fell victim to a hack, losing nearly $6 million in digital assets. This incident marks another significant blow to the crypto industry, highlighting ongoing vulnerabilities within the DeFi space.
Initial reports indicate that the platform first suffered a loss of approximately $4.5 million, as noted by the on-chain security firm Cyvers in a post shared on Sept. 16. The post revealed:
“Suspicious address already swapped USDC to ETH! Total estimated loss is around $4.5M so far! However, a suspicious address is still draining the pools! Total loss might increase!”
Shortly after, a second wave of malicious transactions increased the total amount stolen to nearly $6 million. Chaofan Shou, co-founder of Fuzzland, confirmed this in a subsequent post on Sept. 16, raising concerns over further potential losses.
This hack comes just two months after a massive breach at WazirX, an Indian cryptocurrency exchange, where over $230 million was stolen. That incident was the second-largest crypto hack of 2024, underscoring the growing frequency and scale of these attacks.
The Delta Prime attack is believed to have originated from a private key exploit, allowing hackers to take control of the platform’s wallets. Meir Dolev, CTO of Cyvers, explained:
“Hackers took control of the wallet which is the admin of Delta Prime proxy contracts. They then upgraded these contracts to point to their malicious ones, enabling them to drain Delta Prime pools on the Arbitrum chain. Total loss is $5.9 million USD.”
As investigations continue, the breach serves as a stark reminder of the urgent need for stronger security measures in the decentralized finance ecosystem.