Hacker drains $1.08M from Audius following passing of malicious proposal

Proposals in crypto help communities make consensus-based decisions. However, for decentralized music platform Auduis, the passing of a malicious governance proposal resulted in the transfer of tokens worth $5.9 million, with the hacker making away with $1 million.ย 

On July 24, a malicious proposal (Proposal #85) requesting the transfer of 18 million Audiusโ€™ in-house AUDIO tokens was approved by community voting. First pointed out on Crypto Twitter by @spreekaway, the attacker created the malicious proposal wherein they were โ€œable to call initialize() and set himself as the sole guardian of the governance contract.โ€

Further investigation from Auduis confirmed the unauthorized transfer of AUDIO tokens from the companyโ€™s treasury. Following the revelation, Auduis proactively halted all Audius smart contracts and AUDIO tokens on the Ethereum blockchain.ย 

Blockchain investigator Peckshield narrowed down the fault to Audiusโ€™ storage layout inconsistencies.

While the hackerโ€™s governance proposal drained out 18 million tokens worth nearly $6 million from the treasury, it was soon dumped and sold for $1.08 million. While the dumping resulted in maximum slippage, investors recommended an immediate buyback to prevent existing investors from dumping and further lowering the tokenโ€™s floor price.ย 

Investors are yet to get clarity on the stolen funds as one investor asked, โ€œThey hacked the community fund right? The team’s fund is separate correct?โ€

While a post-mortem report is underway, Audius has not yet responded to Cointelegraphโ€™s request for comment.

Related: Yuga Labs warns of โ€˜persistent threat groupโ€™ targeting NFT holders

Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) creator Yuga Labs issued its second warning about an expected โ€œcoordinated attackโ€ on its social media accounts.

In June, Gordon Goner, pseudonymous co-founder of Yuga Labs, issued the first warning of a possible incoming attack on its Twitter social media accounts. Soon after the warning, Twitter officials actively monitored the accounts and fortified their existing security.