Users of LI.FI protocol suffer losses of at least $10 million
Three arrests made in relation to Metamax pyramid scheme
Unsurprisingly, the project turned out to be a pyramid scheme. On June 25, the Philippines SEC issued a warning, noting that the project was not registered with them, and that it "has the characteristics of a 'Ponzi scheme'". Shortly afterwards, Metamax deleted their Twitter account, and shut down victims' online access to their accounts.
Local news estimated that the scheme affected around 15,000 victims, mainly in Cyprus and Greece. Three people have been arrested in connection to the scheme, including a retired Cypriot police officer. One of the suspects turned himself in to police, claiming that he himself was a victim of the scam, and that he believed his life was in danger as he was being threatened by Metamax victims. Days later, a bomb was detonated near a home he once rented.
Minterest hacked for $1.4 million
Minterest paused the supply and borrow portions of their protocol after the attack, and attempted to contact the attacker to negotiate a return of some of the funds.
Dough Finance hacked for $1.9 million
Dough Finance sent an on-chain message to the attacker, asking them to return the "misappropriated funds", threatening that they would "pursue all criminal, legal, and administrative avenues available" in the event that the attacker did not do so.
Popular defi protocol websites replaced with wallet drainers amid mass Squarespace domain hijacking
Somewhat ironically, the "Unstoppable Domains" web3 domain service was also impacted, and their site was offline for a while before they regained control.
The hijacking appears to be thanks to an attack on Squarespace's domain registry. Crypto founder Bobby Ong has suggested that the attack is affecting domains acquired through Google Domains, which sold its business to Squarespace several months ago. "Tthe forced migration of domains to Squarespace removed 2FA causing all these domains to be vulnerable and several have been hijacked," he wrote. "Best thing to do is to not interact with crypto and rest for the next couple of days until everything is resolved."
Web2 is going just great!
OmegaPro founder arrested for allegedly running crypto Ponzi
The OmegaPro Ponzi scheme was reportedly linked to the OneCoin crypto Ponzi, whose operators stole at least $4 billion from millions of victims since 2019. Multiple people associated with OneCoin have been arrested, including its co-founder Karl Sebastian Greenwood, but its "Cryptoqueen" co-founder Ruja Ignatova was one of Europol's most wanted fugitives and remains the subject of an Interpol red notice.
- "$4B cryptocurrency scammer caught in Istanbul", Türkiye Today [archive]
Doja Cat's Twitter account hacked to promote meme token
The attacker appeared to have only marginal success, as the token reached a market cap of around $500,000 before collapsing by 96%.
Hackers have compromised a string of celebrity Twitter accounts to promote memecoins recently, including those of Hulk Hogan and Metallica.
Bittensor wallets drained
Bittensor is among the artificial intelligence-focused cryptocurrency projects that have become popular recently amid the AI hype. Although the project website boasts that "Bittensor is creating a new future for humanity, where new economies and new commodities are decentralized by design and where no single entity is a sole authority," the group unilaterally halted the chain in the wake of the attack.
- "Bittensor Community Update — July 3, 2024", Opentensor Foundation [archive]
Silvergate Bank pays $63 million to settle charges from multiple agencies
According to the regulators, Silvergate "had serious deficiencies" in its anti-money laundering programs, including in its intra-customer crypto transfer product. In particular, the SEC highlighted $9 billion in suspicious transfers among FTX entities that should have been detected by compliance programs. The SEC also alleged that Silvergate misrepresented its financial state during the post-FTX collapse bank run.
- "SEC Charges Silvergate Capital, Former CEO for Misleading Investors about Compliance Program", U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission [archive]
- "Crypto-Friendly Silvergate Bank Pays $63M to Settle Charges With SEC, Fed, California Regulator", CoinDesk [archive]
Yield App declares insolvency, citing FTX losses
In the immediate aftermath of the FTX collapse in November 2022, Yield App CEO Tim Frost had assured customers that "Yield App has no exposure to Alameda or the FTT token, and no signifiant exposure to FTX". However, Yield is now — going on two years after the FTX collapse — claiming to be suing "several hedge funds" that had lost money on FTX.
- "Crypto platform Yield App shuts down citing FTX losses", CoinTelegraph [archive]
- Statement and FAQ by Yield App [archive]