Sunday, June 26, 2022

Harmony offers $1M bounty, but is it big enough?

The Harmony team says it will offer $1 million to the hacker who exploited the Horizon Bridge for $100 million, but that may not be enough to get the funds back.

The Harmony layer-1 blockchain project team has offered a bounty equal to just 1% of the $100 million in crypto stolen from the Horizon Bridge hack last week. 

Harmony tweeted on June 26 that the team had committed $1 million for the return of the funds that were stolen from the Horizon Bridge on June 23. It added, “Harmony will advocate for no criminal charges when funds are returned.”

However, concerns have been raised that the modest bounty sum may not be enough to incentivize the attacker to return the funds.

The Horizon Bridge is a token bridge between the Harmony blockchain and the Ethereum network, Binance Chain, and Bitcoin. The Bitcoin bridge was not affected in this exploit.

Compared to other high-profile exploits this year, Harmony’s bounty offer ranks low. The $10 million offered to the Rari Fuse attacker in May was 12.5% of the total stolen. The Beanstalk Finance team offered $7.6 million which was 10% of the total exploited from the protocol in April.

Harmony’s bounty offer is so low that the crypto trader known on Twitter as Degen Spartan called it an “insulting amount.” He added, “imagine losing 100m and thinking you're in a position to lowball for a 1% bounty lmwo these people are just doing performance art to mitigate legal liability.”

In an incident response update on the Horizon bridge hack on June 25, Harmony founder Stephen Tse tweeted that the hack was not the result of a smart contract code breach, instead, the team found evidence that private keys were compromised which led to the breach of the bridge.

Tse said that the Ethereum side of the bridge had migrated “to a 4-5 multisig since the incident.” The vulnerability of the multisig wallet requiring just two out of five signers was brought up by a community member in April, but the issue was not addressed by the Harmony team until now.

A multisig wallet is a crypto wallet that requires multiple key holders to approve a transaction. These wallets are commonly used at crypto projects.

As of the time of writing, the Horizon Bridge hacker has not moved the stolen funds into Tornado Cash, an Ether (ETH) mixer, or any other anonymizer.

Related: How can crypto stop getting hacked?

Hope is not lost for Harmony, as its $1 million bounty is not the smallest proportional to the amount of funds lost. In 2021, the Poly Network interoperability platform was hacked for $610 million. The team’s bounty offer of $500,000 was 0.08% of the total stolen. The offer was rejected, but luckily the funds were returned anyway.



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Anonymous vows to bring Do Kwon’s ‘crimes’ to light

“There is no doubt that there are many more crimes to be discovered in your trail of destruction,” hacktivist group Anonymous said on its YouTube channel.

Hacktivist group Anonymous has pledged to “make sure” Terra co-founder Do Kwon is “brought to justice as soon as possible” in regards to the collapse of the Terra (LUNA) and TerraUSD (UST) ecosystems in May. 

On Sunday, a video purportedly coming from the Anonymous hacker group aired out a laundry list of Kwon’s alleged wrongdoings, including cashing out $80 million each month from Luna and TerraUSD prior to its collapse as well as his role in the fall of stable coin Basis Cash, for which Do Kwon allegedly co-created under the pseudonym “Rick Sanchez” in late 2020.

“Do Kwon, if you are listening, sadly, there is nothing that can be done to reverse the damage that you have done. At this point, the only thing that we can do is hold you accountable and make sure that you are brought to justice as soon as possible.”

The hacker group said it would be looking into Do Kwon’s actions since he entered the crypto space to expose his alleged crimes. 

“Anonymous is looking into Do Kwon’s entire history since he entered the crypto space to see what we can learn and bring to light,” the group stated.

“There is no doubt that there are many more crimes to be discovered in your trail of destruction.”

The hacker group also criticized Kwon for his “arrogant tactics” in trolling competitors and critics and “acting like he would never fail.”

Originating in 2003 on 4chan, Anonymous is a decentralized international activist collective known for orchestrating cyber attacks against government institutions, agencies, private corporations, and even the Church of Scientology.

In June 2021, the same YouTube channel took aim at Tesla CEO Elon Musk for “destroying lives” by using his clout and influence on Twitter to play with the crypto markets. The video has around 3.4 million views as of today.

It is worth noting that there are multiple YouTube channels that either claim to be affiliated with the hacker group Anonymous. However, there is a general consensus that there is no official YouTube channel for the group, given its inherent decentralized and anonymous nature.

Mixed reactions from the community

Commenters of the YouTube video and the community on Twitter appeared to be broadly supportive of the hacker group’s pledge to go after Kwon, with one commenter calling Anonymous the “Robinhood of today.”

However, the video message garnered more skepticism on the r/CryptoCurrency subreddit, with users criticizing the hacker group for issuing an empty threat against Kwon and providing no new information to the public, with one commenter saying:

“Anonymous is so teen bop now [...] This anon video is so non-threatening it's almost bizarre.”

While another said, “would expect them to have uncovered something but its nothing more than, well nothing.”

It appears that, for now, Kwon will likely have bigger, more tangible threats to worry about.

Terraform Labs, for which Do Kwon is the co-founder, is currently under multiple investigations from the South Korean authorities, including the alleged embezzlement of Bitcoin (BTC) from the company’s treasury.

Related: South Korean prosecutors ban Terraform Labs employees from exiting the country: Report

In May, a famous financial crimes investigation unit dubbed the “Grim Reapers of Yeouido” was revived by South Korea to investigate the collapse of Terra. The team consists of various regulators and will focus on prosecuting fraud and illegal trading schemes.

Later that month, Korean authorities subpoenaed all Terraform Labs employees to investigate any internal role in market manipulation.

The company has also been fined $78 million by South Korea’s national tax agency for tax evasion charges.



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BTC price tops 10-day highs as Bitcoin whale demand sees 'huge spike'

Dip-buying appears to be in full swing among whales, new data shows, but analysts remain wary on the outlook for the short term.

Bitcoin (BTC) made the most of weekend volatility on June 26 as a squeeze saw BTC/USD reach its highest in over a week.

BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

"Unusual whale activity" flagged

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView followed the largest cryptocurrency as it hit $21,868 on Bitstamp.

Just hours from the weekly close, a reversal then set in under $21,500, Bitcoin still in line to seal its first "green" weekly candle since May.

The event followed warnings that volatile conditions both up and down could return during low-liquidity weekend trading. On-chain data nonetheless fixed what appeared to be buying by Bitcoin's largest-volume investor cohort prior to the uptick.

"Unusual whale activity detected in Bitcoin," popular analytics resource Game of Trades observed.

"The supply held by entities with balance 1k-10k BTC just saw a huge spike in demand. Let’s watch if the trend confirms."

An accompanying chart from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode showed shifting up markedly from around the time BTC/USD hit lows of $17,600 this month.

BTC supply held by entities with 1,000-10,000 BTC annotated chart. Source: Games of Trades/ Twitter

As Cointelegraph reported, whales had eagerly purchased BTC below $20,000, forming new support clusters in the process.

CME futures gap looms large

For others, however, conservative views on price action remained the norm.

Related: Bitcoin gives ‘encouraging signs’ — Watch these BTC price levels next

Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe eyed the need to crack $21,600 definitively in order to secure the chances of further upside. Additionally, last week's closing price of $21,100 on CME Group's Bitcoin futures could provide a short-term target.

"Standard weekend fake-outs happening and probably ending at CME close at $21.1K for Bitcoin," he forecast on the day.

"No clear breakout above $21.6K at this point, yet."
CME Bitcoin futures 1-hour candle chart. Source: TradingView

The monthly close was still on course to cement Bitcoin's worst June on record with monthly losses of almost 33%.

Along with May 2021, this would also be the worst-performing month since before the 2018 bear market bottom, data from on-chain monitoring resource Coinglass confirms.

Bitcoin monthly returns chart (screenshot). Source: Coinglass

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.



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What are Bitcoin covenants, and how do they work?

Bitcoin improvements can be achieved by implementing covenants. This article explains covenants, how they work and the debate around them.

Drawbacks of Bitcoin covenants

Various prominent Bitcoin experts, including Adam Back, Jimmy Song and Andreas Antonopoulos, have raised some concerns over the implementation of restrictive covenants, in particular with the BIP119.

In particular, Antonopoulos has voiced concerns over "recursive covenants" that the new update could convey, thereby deteriorating the network. A recursive covenant occurs when a programmer restricts a transaction, but he does it in a way that restricts another transaction after that, starting a domino effect resulting in future limitless recursive covenants.

Blacklisting and risks of censorship and confiscation

While locking up where a Bitcoin can be spent is advantageous to ensure more security, it also provides grounds for censorship, and control by governments, which would hinder the very existence of Bitcoin. Authorities could potentially force exchanges to withdraw only to covenants with some control over the coin.

While this same risk already exists, since governments can ask exchanges to send only to addresses with a taproot spend path or multi-sig controlled by them, could the implementation of covenants facilitate malicious purposes where it would make it easier for governments to enforce a sort of on-chain KYC? 

Fungibility threats

Covenants might interfere with Bitcoin’s fungibility — the ability of each Bitcoin to be identical in function and quality.

While useful for security and scalability, covenants would change the properties of specific Bitcoin units, essentially creating different types of digital currency, distinct according to what could be spent or where it could be sent. 

As a result, those who oppose the change argued that limiting how you can spend your Bitcoin would ultimately limit Bitcoin’s use as a digital currency, with inevitable consequences in its value.

There are strong opinions on covenants' pros and cons; however, debates are healthy and necessary to improve a decentralized and leaderless network. Ultimately, the final decision will be down to the users and node operators who will download the software that better reflects their viewpoint.

Advantages of Bitcoin covenants

Improving Bitcoin security is one of the most significant advances constantly sought by developers, and covenants might offer a great helping hand in enhancing it.

Besides improved scalability, covenants are helpful for security, especially against some form of the $5 wrench attack. Taking steps to protect your Bitcoin property so that it becomes harder for people to steal is an excellent use case. 

Another good security approach provided by covenants would be to restrict your UTXO to be sent to a multi-sig address after a year, for example. Covenants can also address the difficulty of secure key management, and implementing secure vaults can help with one of the biggest problems of cryptocurrency security. Vaults enhance end-user security by disincentivizing the theft of coins. 

The user employs a mechanism that prevents an attacker from gaining full control over funds despite stealing the private keys used to secure them. This mechanism includes the use of pre-signed transactions with key deletion to enforce a time-lock on funds. 

Covenants can also implement a restrictive mechanism to prevent double-spending attacks in Bitcoin-NG, a Byzantine fault-tolerant blockchain protocol that has been recently proposed to improve Bitcoin’s throughput, latency and overall scalability. 

This mechanism is translated into so-called poison transactions that can be implemented progressively as an overlay on top of the Bitcoin blockchain.

How do Bitcoin covenants work?

Covenants can be defined as linguistic primitives (the smallest and simplest “unit of processing” available to a programmer) that extend the Bitcoin script language allowing transactions to restrain the scripts of the redeeming ones. 

In a typical Bitcoin transaction, your Bitcoin is protected with a locking script, whose conditions should be met if you want to spend the coins. Examples of locking conditions can be the denial of expenditure without a signature proving you have the private key that matches the public key; or timelocks, which are similar to covenants and indicate that coins can’t be spent until after a certain number of blocks. 

So whereas in a “normal” Bitcoin script, we only require specific conditions to be met to unlock a particular requirement (sign a transaction with a private key, for example), in a covenant, we go a step further by restricting what you can do with that coin, or where a coin can be spent. 

A Bitcoin covenant is often defined as “a mechanism to enforce conditions on how the control of coins will be transferred in the future” and includes a set of conditions on an unspent transaction[TX] output (UTXO), which defines how the transaction’s relevant coins can be spent.

For example, one wallet can place a covenant on the Bitcoin it holds whitelisting a few related addresses. When this wallet broadcasts a Bitcoin transaction to another wallet, in turn, this wallet can only send the same Bitcoin to addresses included on that whitelist. 

Can Bitcoin be improved?

Bitcoin can undoubtedly be improved, and BIPs, including covenants, represent proposed changes to Bitcoin’s consensus. 

Covenants are included in Bitcoin Improvement Proposals (BIPs), the upgrade and improvement process Bitcoin undergoes to modify and advance issues like scalability, security and usability.

Covenants allow a Bitcoin script language to prevent an authorized spender from spending on specific other scripts. They describe how to improve Bitcoin in smart contracts, information included in a code that executes when certain conditions are met. 

These Bitcoin contracts could prevent users’ funds from being stolen in case of hacking and can also help scale the network. There are many proposed applications for covenants, from scaling Bitcoin transaction capacity to congestion control, trust-minimized loans and more. These use cases are described in the controversial BIP119, presented by developer Jeremy Rubin as a soft fork, and discussed by the community. 

This Bitcoin Improvement Proposal introduces a change to Bitcoin’s code, which seeks to use a new operation code (opcode). The opcode is OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY (CTV-style covenant) and enables a limited set of precious use cases without incurring significant risks. 

CTV can potentially help scale Bitcoin through the implementation of Congestion Controlled Transactions. When transaction traffic is very high, fees increase exponentially. Using this CTV, large payment processors can include all their payments in a single transaction for confirmation purposes, saving block space and resulting in faster and cheaper execution.

What are covenants?

A covenant is used in private property law as a contract to restrict an object’s use, for example, the interdiction to extend a building or change a facade's color.

Since Bitcoin is private property, the term covenant seems perfectly fitted to indicate restrictions on its transactions. You have ownership of the property but can be limited in what you can do with it.

Specifically, Bitcoin covenant proposals restrict how a coin can be spent after you bought it and where coins can be transferred. These restrictions can be compared to those that banks might place on specific merchants suspected of engaging in illicit activities. 

Covenants can be useful to upgrade Bitcoin; however, since they are complex to implement and trigger controversy over the cryptocurrency’s fungibility and censorship-resistant property, they have not been seriously considered for inclusion in Bitcoin for a long time. 



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How low can Ethereum price drop versus Bitcoin amid the DeFi contagion?

Interestingly, Ethereum has not reclaimed its all-time high against Bitcoin since June 2017 despite the NFT craze.

Ethereum's native token Ether (ETH) has declined by more than 35% against Bitcoin (BTC) since December 2021 with a potential to decline further in the coming months.

ETH/BTC weekly price chart. Source: TradingView

ETH/BTC dynamics

The ETH/BTC pair's bullish trends typically suggest an increasing risk appetite among crypto traders, where speculation is more focused on Ether's future valuations versus keeping their capital long-term in BTC. 

Conversely, a bearish ETH/BTC cycle is typically accompanied by a plunge in altcoins and Ethereum's decline in market share. As a result, traders seek safety in BTC, showcasing their risk-off sentiment within the crypto industry.

Ethereum TVL wipe-out

Interest in the Ethereum blockchain soared during the pandemic as developers started turning to it to create a wave of so-called decentralized finance projects, including peer-to-peer exchange and lending platforms.

That resulted in a boom in the total value locked (TVL) inside the Ethereum blockchain ecosystem, rising from $465 million in March 2020 to as high as $159 billion in November 2021, up more than 34,000%, according to data from DeFi Llama.

Ethereum TVL performance since 2019. Source: DeFi Llama

Interestingly, ETH/BTC surged 345% to 0.08, a 2021 peak, in the same period, given an increase in demand for transactions on the Ethereum blockchain. However, the pair has since dropped over 35% and was trading for 0.057 BTC on June 26.

ETH/BTC's drop coincides with a massive plunge in Ethereum TVL, from $159 billion in November 2021 to $48.81 billion in June 2022, led by a contagion fears in the DeFi industry.

Also, institutions have withdrawn $458 million this year from Ethereum-based investment funds as of June 17, suggesting that interest in Ethereum's DeFi boom has been waning.

Bitcoin struggling but stronger than Ether

Bitcoin has faced smaller downsides compared to Ether in the ongoing bear market.

BTC's price has dropped nearly 70% to around $21,500 since November 2021, versus Ether's 75% drop in the same period.

Also, unlike Ethereum, Bitcoin-focused investment funds have seen inflows of $480 million year-to-date, showing that BTC's drop has done little to curb its demand among institutional investors.

Investment flows into/out of crypto funds by assets. Source: CoinShares

ETH/BTC downside targets

Capital flows, coupled with an increasing distrust in the DeFi sector, could keep benefiting Bitcoin over Ethereum in 2022, resulting in more downside for ETH/BTC.

Related: Swan Bitcoin CEO against crypto lenders: Users are way under-compensated for the risk

From a technical perspective, the pair has been holding above a support confluence defined by a rising trendline, a Fibonacci retracement level at 0.048 BTC, and its 200-week exponential moving average (200-week EMA; the blue wave in the chart below) near 0.049 BTC.

ETH/BTC weekly price chart. Source: TradingView

In a rebound, ETH/BTC could test the 0.5 Fib line next near 0.062. Conversely, a decisive break below the support confluence could mean a decline toward the 0.786 Fib line at 0.027 in 2022, down more than 50% from today's price.

The ETH/BTC breakdown might coincide with an extended ETH/USD market decline, primarily due to the Federal Reserve's quantitative tightenig that has recently pressured crypto prices lower against the U.S. dollar. 

Conversely, weaker economic data could prompt the Fed to cool down on its tightening spree. This could limit Ether and the other crypto assets' downside bias in the dollar market, per Informa Global Markets.

The firm noted:

“Macroeconomic conditions need to improve and the Fed’s aggressive approach to monetary policy has to subside before crypto markets see a bottom."

But given Ethereum has never reclaimed its all-time high against Bitcoin since June 2017 despite a strong adoption rate, the ETH/BTC pair could remain under pressure with the 0.027-target in sight.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.



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6 Questions for Daniel Yan of Matrixport

We ask the buidlers in the blockchain and cryptocurrency sector for their thoughts on the industry… and throw in a few random zingers to keep them on their toes!


 

This week, our 6 Questions go to Daniel Yan, founding partner and chief operating officer at Matrixport a digital assets financial services platform where users can invest, trade and leverage crypto assets.

 

Hey guys, this is Dan I am a founding partner at Matrixport. I have been COO of the company since 2019 overseeing the day-to-day operation of the company. Late last year, I started to spend most of my time building Matrixport Ventures the venture investment arm of the company. It has been a great experience for me both personally and professionally. There has not been a boring day since I dipped my toes into crypto, lets say! Prior to my stint in crypto, I was an options trader in the investment banking industry.

 


1 From smart contracts and DApps to NFTs and DeFi, we have seen so many of the next killer apps for crypto, but none have really taken off quite yet. What will stick?

I will have to first challenge the statement that none have really taken off quite yet! Ethereum for smart contract, OpenSea for NFTs, MetaMask for DApp, and Uniswap for DeFi by my standard, they are all moment-defining successful projects.

I believe all of them will stick and present themselves as key components of the Web3 world we are going into.

Will there be challengers and totally new categories that we cant even fathom right now? Absolutely. Thats the beauty of the crypto world. For most people, DeFi was not a thing till 2020, NFT was not a thing till 2021. We will continue to see category-defining innovations coming along as we progress as an industry.

 

2 What has been the toughest challenge youve faced in our industry so far?

There are many, but if I have to choose one, that would be managing the extremely cyclical volatility and turbulence in the industry.

Due to the nascent nature of the industry (yes, still), things tend to be very volatile both ways no matter in a bull market or a bear market. Throughout these turbulences, there will always be customers that dont feel the best no matter whats on their positions, their executions or simply on the mood. We always try to help customers go through these times better, and that sometimes means tough conversations, difficult decisions, and other things thats not so easy.

 

3 Which people do you find most inspiring, most interesting and most fun in this space?

This could be a cliche answer already, but I think Sam Bankman-Fried is my pick. First, he built an extremely successful business at Alameda and FTX. Then, he became a very vocal supporter on multiple key frontiers in the industry and managed to contribute in a substantial way to the growth of them (Alternative L1, DeFi). At the same time, he managed to build his influence in the traditional finance and regulatory space now a key lobbyist power for the crypto industry.

It takes a lot to achieve just one of the three, so I think the fact he managed to hit all three is beyond impressive.

 

4 Whats the unlikeliest thing to happen on your bucket list?

Bitcoin goes to $100, and I buy loads of them.

 

5 What were you like in high school?

Geeky, goofy and shy. Lets say I have come a long way from then

 

6 What should we be teaching our kids?

Kindness, courage and confidence.

They are quite self-explanatory, so I guess I dont need to elaborate more.

However, they are easier said than done from time to time, I will have to remind myself of these and try to do better.

 

A wish for the young, ambitious blockchain community:

Be courageous, and dont be afraid to fail. Keep building, and WAGMI!



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Friday, June 24, 2022

Axie Infinity to compensate Ronin exploit victims and relaunch bridge

Once the bridge reopens on Tuesday, users will be able to withdraw one ETH for each one they possessed before the attack.

Sky Mavis, the creator of the play-to-earn game Axie Infinity (AXS), announced that it will reimburse victims of the Ronin bridge hack and reopen the bridge next week.

In March, hackers stole more than $620 million in the heist, which included roughly 17,600 Ether (ETH) and 25.5 million USD Coin (USDC) tokens. According to a Bloomberg report on Friday, once the bridge reopens on Tuesday, users will be able to withdraw one ETH for each one they possessed before the attack.

In April, Cointelegraph reported that Sky Mavis closed $150 million in fresh capital led by Binance to refund hack victims. Animoca Brands,16z, Dialectic, Paradigm and Accel were among the investors during the funding round.

The hacker moved the stolen assets around soon after the breach, using TornadoCash to conceal their activities. This is a significant issue for the decentralized finance (DeFi) industry, which has suffered more than $1.22 billion in losses thus far this year.

The Ronin hack was one of the most notable events in recent memory, causing tremors throughout the cryptocurrency industry. Despite this, the Ronin blockchain was not deterred in its mission to achieve significant milestones.

In early June, the blockchain surpassed $4 billion in all-time nonfungible token (NFT) sales volumes, and it remains popular as a digital collectible network. In terms of all-time NFT sales volumes, it is second only to Ethereum. It beats Solana (SOL), Flow (FLOW), Polygon (MATIC) and WAX (WAXP), among many others.

Related: Breaking: Harmony’s Horizon Bridge hacked for $100M

Hacks, rug-pulls and protocol flaws are all common within the cryptocurrency industry. It appears like not a single day goes by without news of another hacking. On Friday, Cointelegraph reported that the Horizon Bridge to the Harmony layer-1 blockchain had been exploited for $100 million in altcoins being swapped for Ether. According to Immunefi, cybercrime losses reached $10.2 billion in 2021.



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