【CryptoWorld】Data shows that in the first half of this year, theft cases linked to national-level hacker organizations occurred frequently, with a total of $2.17 billion in crypto assets stolen in a single incident, breaking last year’s record. Among them, a leading exchange experienced a historic large-scale theft, with a single loss of $1.5 billion. This funds ultimately flowed into sensitive projects of a specific regime.
Worryingly, the methods used by these hackers are evolving rapidly. They not only target exchanges directly but also penetrate weak points in the supply chain by infiltrating third-party systems. More complexly, they utilize mixers and cross-chain bridging tools to hide funds, making tracking and freezing extremely difficult — this is no longer simple transfer and escape, but a highly professionalized money laundering system.
Industry experts’ warnings are clear: relying solely on the defense of a single exchange or institution is far from enough. A full-chain risk control collaboration is needed — from unified auditing standards for exchanges, to transaction monitoring by wallet providers, to risk identification in DeFi protocols, forming a joint defense. This is not only a security issue but also crucial for the long-term health of the entire ecosystem.
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LidoStakeAddict
· 9h ago
2.17 billion dollars? Are they really treating the ecosystem as an ATM?
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NightAirdropper
· 9h ago
$2.17 billion? Oh my, that's only half a year. Hackers are getting more and more skilled.
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The entire supply chain has been infiltrated. The firewalls of exchanges are practically useless.
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Full-chain risk control? Easy to say. How many exchanges can truly achieve it?
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A state-level hacker organization has taken action. This is probably beyond what we can defend against.
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It's the same old story. In the end, users still foot the bill, and their wallets are getting emptier.
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Hackers' techniques are evolving. Are our defenses regressing?
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$2.17 billion—was that the total theft amount last year? That's exaggerated, but also painfully real.
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The process of fund transfer is becoming more complex. Basically, it's black eating black, making money laundering even harder.
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Risk control collaboration? In the Web3 community, no one trusts each other. This suggestion is probably just empty talk.
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FallingLeaf
· 9h ago
2.17 billion USD... This is freaking outrageous, we really need to go self-custody, brothers.
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zkProofInThePudding
· 9h ago
2.17 billion? Oh my god, this number is even higher than the entire last year. My wallet is trembling.
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The supply chain has been infiltrated. This is really no joke.
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A national-level hacker organization has taken action. Our defenses are simply not enough.
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Full-chain risk control collaboration... To put it simply, everyone wants to pass the buck.
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Fund transfers are becoming more complex, hackers are upgrading their skills, and this arms race never ends.
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$2.17 billion is gone, and it feels like the entire ecosystem is a bit unsafe.
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No matter how much exchanges try to defend, there are always leaks. The supply chain is too hard to manage.
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I want to ask if anyone has really been hacked, and how they recovered.
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These days, working on on-chain projects requires a lot of caution. Hackers are really clever.
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Wait, where did this data come from? Is there that much?
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RetailTherapist
· 9h ago
21.7 billion is this all? It feels like it could be even more exaggerated...
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The supply chain has been infiltrated, I knew relying solely on exchange security is simply not enough
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National-level hackers are really ruthless, we retail investors need to learn more protection knowledge
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Full-chain risk control sounds good, but I'm worried that the implementation might be compromised again
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Once these numbers come out, there will probably be a wave of people cutting losses and fleeing😅
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Increased complexity of fund transfers is actually more dangerous for small investors; at least big players have someone watching over them
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Can you imagine? In just half a year, surpassing last year's total... when will it end?
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I just want to know where the stolen coins ended up later?
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If the ecosystem isn't secure, how can our wallets really be safe?
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ProxyCollector
· 9h ago
2.17 billion USD has been stolen by state-level hackers. What’s the point of playing anymore?
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GrayscaleArbitrageur
· 9h ago
$2.17 billion, how many people are going bankrupt...
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The supply chain has been infiltrated, who can we trust as small retail investors?
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Another nation-state hacker, it feels unstoppable, brothers.
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Are exchanges, wallets, and DEXs all unsafe? Then how do we play?
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We've been talking about full-chain risk control for years, does it really work, brother?
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Every time I see this kind of news, I think of Luna from two years ago...
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Funds transfer has become more complicated, hacker technology is really getting more advanced.
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In the first half of the year, it already surpassed the whole of last year; this growth rate is a bit exaggerated.
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I just want to know which exchanges are the safest. Any experts to point me in the right direction?
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The ecosystem needs collaboration, but right now everyone is acting independently.
Hackers have stolen a record amount of crypto assets on a large scale, with thefts in the first half of the year already surpassing last year's total.
【CryptoWorld】Data shows that in the first half of this year, theft cases linked to national-level hacker organizations occurred frequently, with a total of $2.17 billion in crypto assets stolen in a single incident, breaking last year’s record. Among them, a leading exchange experienced a historic large-scale theft, with a single loss of $1.5 billion. This funds ultimately flowed into sensitive projects of a specific regime.
Worryingly, the methods used by these hackers are evolving rapidly. They not only target exchanges directly but also penetrate weak points in the supply chain by infiltrating third-party systems. More complexly, they utilize mixers and cross-chain bridging tools to hide funds, making tracking and freezing extremely difficult — this is no longer simple transfer and escape, but a highly professionalized money laundering system.
Industry experts’ warnings are clear: relying solely on the defense of a single exchange or institution is far from enough. A full-chain risk control collaboration is needed — from unified auditing standards for exchanges, to transaction monitoring by wallet providers, to risk identification in DeFi protocols, forming a joint defense. This is not only a security issue but also crucial for the long-term health of the entire ecosystem.