Autor Cointelegraph By Zhiyuan Sun

Jump Crypto replenishes funds from $320M Wormhole hack in largest-ever DeFi 'bailout'

On Thursday, Jump Crypto, a crypto venture capital firm that owns Certus One, the developer of the Wormhole token bridge, announced it had deposited 120 thousand Ether (ETH) into a Solana-Ethereum bridge that suffered a devastating exploit. The day prior, hackers fraudulently minted 120 thousand wrapped Ether (wETH) worth $321 million on the Solana (SOL) platform, then redeemed 93,750 wETH for ETH on the Ethereum network while swapping the rest for other altcoins on the Solana network.The cross-chain ETH-wETH is supposed to have an exchange ratio of 1:1 against one another. Therefore, the unauthorized minting of wETH leads to significant inflation, which can quickly degrade confidence in the underlying bridge. After the latest “bailout” by Jump Crypto and a patch fix, however, things appear to be back to normal, with Wormhole developers tweeting:”All funds have been restored, and Wormhole is back up. ETH contract has been filled, and all wETH are backed 1:1.”Many users quickly took to social media to thank Jump Crypto for the noble move, with @terrysoh87 writing:”Thank you so much. I know VC often gets hated on, but its times like this, everyone hopes VC saves the day. WAGMI [We are all going to make it]”But there also remains a glaring problem — the whereabouts of the “hacked funds” and whether or not the malicious actor who took them would face the consequences as to deter similar decentralized finance scams in the future. As these tokens were fraudulently minted and still exist in the ecosystem, it raises concerns about the fungibility of “hacked” ETH tokens as they are laundered into “clean” ETH. In addition, the minting of so many tokens could lead to temporary inflationary concerns. @dotstack (rhymer.stk) wrote:like?i just don’t get it. instead of focusing on recovering funds, we’re talking about what? a bailout?i just hope it’s a loan pending funds recovery.— rhymer.stk (@dotstack) February 3, 2022

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Gamestop partners with Immutable X for NFT marketplace, announces $100M grant for creators

On Thursday, iconic brick-and-mortar video game retailer GameStop announced a partnership with layer-2 nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, Ethereum (ETH) scaling solution Immutable X to develop GameStop’s upcoming NFT marketplace. GameStop will utilize Immutable’s technology for trading and minting NFTs.We’re thrilled to announce that @Immutable is taking another leap forward in the gaming & blockchain industry by partnering w/ @GameStop to power their NFT Marketplace: https://t.co/Tase31CBt3 Continue for more… pic.twitter.com/8v6Titg3kq— Immutable | $IMX (@Immutable) February 3, 2022Immutable developers claim that the new NFT marketplace will be 100% carbon neutral with no gas fees. In addition, both Immutable and GameStop will launch a $100 million grant program denominated in IMX tokens for NFT content creators and tech developers. Although GameStop will receive the rights to up to $150 million IMX tokens upon accomplishing certain business milestones.At the time of publication, the grant is only available to corporate entities and decentralized autonomous organizations developing video games, Web3, metaverse, IT services and digital brands. The month prior, GameStop entered the NFT space by announcing the hiring of over 20 new staff and teasing two upcoming partnerships with blockchain firms for NFT game development.On social media, users appeared less than pleased with the development, with @LouiePikmin2 writing:”Wow, you guys will really do anything to stay in business, including investing heavily into a fad.”In context, GameStop had dropped over 70% since all-time highs last January, when it was the target of a Reddit-fueled short-squeeze. The decay of its stock momentum has created a community of less-than-happy investors.In addition, users appear to be disgruntled that Loopring, an ETH token project designed for powering decentralized cryptocurrency exchanges, was not included in the announcement despite prior negotiations with GameStop. However, in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing the same day, GameStop disclosed that Loopring is still involved in the NFT marketplace, with the company stating:”GameStop will not integrate any blockchain protocol other than Ethereum Layer 1 and Loopring into their NFT marketplace without first having integrated Immutable.”

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Battle for authenticity heats up in world's most popular NFT collection

In a Discord post published on Wednesday, Matt Hall, the core developer at Larva Labs, the entity behind the popular CryptoPunks V2 and, initially, CryptoPunks V1 nonfungible tokens (NFT) collections, announced he would be “taking appropriate steps” in the following days regarding the alleged copyright infringement of “both the art and the CryptoPunks name” of the CryptoPunks V1 collection. Normally, this would amount to submitting a takedown notice under the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, or DMCA, to the platform responsible for hosting the content for auction.Matt Hall discussing CryptoPunks V1 vs. V2 | Source: Larva Labs official DiscordIn 2017, Larva Labs created the CryptoPunks V1 NFT collection containing a fixed supply of 10,000 items. However, users soon discovered an underlying bug within the project’s smart contract that enabled the Punks’ buyers to withdraw their Ether (ETH) post-purchase, resulting in theft. Larva Labs quickly deemed the collection inauthentic and launched CryptoPunks V2, also with a fixed supply of 10,000 images. The move came only after the initial 10,000 CryptoPunks V1 collection sold out however, so there are a total of 20,000 CryptoPunks in existence, with the authenticity of 10,000 of them disputed. On top of that, Larva Labs cannot simply destroy the V1 project as Twitter user @0xStroudonian allegedly pointed out that both the V1 and V2 smart contracts are intertwined as they point to the same file.The issue remained under the radar as OpenSea previously banned the sale of CryptoPunks V1, even though users wrapped them as ERC-721 tokens to fix the underlying exploit. However, the wrapped collection’s recent listing on LooksRare prompted OpenSea to rescind the ban. At the time of publication, the CryptoPunks V1 collection accumulated 12,069 ETH ($34.1 million) in total volume traded on OpenSea, while the CryptoPunks V2 collection accumulated 819,900 ETH ($2.22 billion) in total volume traded on the same platform.Blockchain enthusiasts remain sharply divided over the authenticity issues of the V1 and V2 CryptoPunk collections. For example, Discord user Rufus Xavier#9449 wrote:”Larva labs, you need to get your shit together. DMCA is not the way. Now you’re doing it to your collection after you traded it? You’re making the entire space look bad. Stop.”Meanwhile, Discord user mb#1510 expressed a different point of view:”I just don’t know if I can be ok with selling someone V2 knowing there is another token that might or might not have relevance to it.”In copyright law, the existence of counterfeits and diluted products can significantly affect consumers’ confidence in the original brand and may cause them to drop in value. As the supply of CryptoPunks was suppose to be “fixed” at 10,000 items, adding another 10,000 into the collection by acknowledging their legitimacy leads to brand dilution, and could lead to a drop in the collection’s value. However, there is no legal precedent as to whether or not the spin-off, resurfacing, and re-commercialization of an NFT art collection due to a smart-contract bug constitutes an act of copyright infringement.

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Youtuber and alleged thief publicly refuses to return investors' funds after $750k rug pull

On Wednesday, American Youtuber and “internet detective” Coffeezillaa published a recorded interview of himself and disgraced Youtuber Paul “Ice Poseidon” Denino. During the session, Denino allegedly confirmed that he made off with $750 thousand worth of his investors’ money through rug pulling a crypto project dubbed “Cxcoin.”The ordeal started last July, when Denino created the Cxcoin for streamers and content creators on the Binance Smart Chain. Denino then allegedly promoted the coin to his community of followers, telling them that “don’t worry, no rug [pull] here all the money is locked [in a smart contract] lol, my wallets are pinned.” However, Denino abandoned the project just two weeks later, saying:”It’s pretty simple. Basically, the coin was inactive for a long time; the crypto market is crashing, and obviously, I’m not going to let $300 thousand [locked] in the liquidity pool go to waste, so I took what wasn’t necessary in there.”In addition to the $300 thousand taken from the liquidity pool, another $200 thousand from the Cxcoin token presale and $250 thousand from a marketing wallet are reportedly missing, yielding a total of $750 thousand worth of investors’ funds. Denino allegedly returned a small portion of the misappropriated funds to the smart contracts after public outrage. However, the majority of the capital has not been returned. Later on, when asked by Coffeezillaa as to how much money he made off the “scam,” Denino cited 55% of the money going to himself, while 45% going to developers, leaving him with a cut of approximately $300 thousand.To Be Fair, You Have To Have a Very High IQ to Understand Crypto Scams. but actually it’s incredibly simple —- if Ice Poseidon made $300,000 from two weeks of cryptoscamming, where did that money come from? from thin air? https://t.co/v5aaMDZhDT— Coffeezilla (@coffeebreak_YT) February 2, 2022Regarding the whereabouts of the funds, Denino allegedly purchased a Tesla only days after the capital went missing. With comments on his Twitter account suspended, many users took to Youtube and Discord to voice their dissatisfaction, with Discord user 3840x2160p#3258 writing:”He lived off donators’ money his whole grown life pretty much, then his twitch comeback gets denied, and so since his career is stagnant, he decides to scam his fans and investors.”Ice Poseidon originally rose to prominence as a Twitch streamer playing the fantasy MMORPG Runescape. In 2017, he was permanently banned from the platform after a viewer called in a bomb-threat hoax as he boarded an airplane. During at least one instance in his Twitch streams, Denino allegedly admitted to credit-card fraud while on air.BREAKING! The famous livestreamer Ice Poseidon has admitted to taking $500,000+ from his fans in a crypto scam he started called CXCOIN. I confronted Ice on a call and he told me he was going to “look out for himself and not do that” (return the money)FULL VIDEO OUT NOW pic.twitter.com/gsIanC1Ig9— Coffeezilla (@coffeebreak_YT) January 31, 2022

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$5 wrench attacks appear to be on the rise in the crypto community

Normally, the only way to access one’s crypto funds is through their private key, which, thanks to advances in cryptography, would take nothing less than an advanced futuristic quantum computer to decipher. That said, mafias and gangs have managed to think outside the box. Instead of wasting their efforts on breaking the underlying cryptography, they’ve turned their attention to targeting crypto owners, themselves.A $5 wrench attack is when someone finds out you have a lot of crypto and physically attacks or threatens you for your private keys. On Wednesday, at least eight men, including a police officer, were arrested in the city of Pimpri-Chinchwad, India, for allegedly kidnapping a crypto trader and demanding ransom. The arrested officer, Constable Dilip Tukaram Khandare, reportedly learned of the trader’s 300 crore rupee ($40.13 million) crypto wealth via access to confidential data while working in the cybercrime department. The trader was let go after his friend filed a missing person report that prompted Khandare, who feared repercussions, to release him. Similarly, last November, four assailants allegedly broke into American tech entrepreneur Dentzel Zaryn’s home in Spain and attempted to coerce him into giving up his private keys. The tech entrepreneur reportedly holds $58 million worth in Bitcoin (BTC) across his wallets, with a significant portion of funds concentrated in one account. When Zaryn refused, he was subsequently tortured until he revealed the account information. The assailants left the property shortly after.As Dr. Anon, a Cointelegraph staff member with expertise in such matters wrote in a related magazine piece:These attacks are frequently “your money or your life” situations carried out by sophisticated, professional, and organized criminals. That said, one can significantly limit their losses by having a “decoy” crypto wallet with a small portion of funds. If a robbery, kidnapping, etc., were to occur, simply hand it over and alert authorities afterward. It’s not worth the risk of getting tortured or killed for refusing to pay.The same month, a crypto trader in Hong Kong was kidnapped by triad gang members who demanded $30 million Hong Kong dollars ($3.85 million) in ransom. Police managed to raid the kidnappers’ residence and rescue the trader, but not before being held in captivity for over a week — including being beaten with hammers during interrogations. According to reports, kidnappers first demanded an $8 million ransom in Hong Kong dollars ($1.03 million), which was only raised to $30 million Hong Kong dollars after the triad discovered the victim had a lot of USDT in his account. “It’s maybe best to stay silent, keep a low profile, especially online, and make up a cover story if ever prompted about what you do,” writes Dr. Anon, “even if you have a decoy wallet, criminals could always get the wrong impression about your financial status and demand a ransom greater than your entire net worth, and it’d be pretty tough to get out of that one.”

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