The ParaSwap DAO community has agreed to use the funds in its treasury to compensate hack victims. The proposal was submitted by the ParaSwap decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) on April 4, bringing the idea of using the funds to refund the AugustusV6 contract victims.
ParaSwap DAO agrees to compensate victims
The community came to a consensus three days later with about 96.81% of the voters in favor of compensating the victims affected by the hack.
The ParaSwap AugustusV6 contract, which was proposed to reduce gas fees and increase swapping efficiency, was launched momentarily on March 18. However, there was a slight vulnerability in the upgrade that allowed hackers access to it, draining funds from the accounts of users who approved it. Although the platform was able to deploy a soft rollback to block an excessive loss of about $3.4 million, the hackers were still able to cart away with more than $864,000.
After the hack, the ParaSwap Foundation released a statement saying that it is in communication with analytics firm Chainalysis and TRM Labs. The statement noted that the Foundation was working with the platforms to identify the hacker’s wallet address and trace the movement of the fund. Furthermore, the foundation promised to cover the funds linked to the breach including communications with authorities, payments for contract re-audits, and the process involved in refunding.
Recovery efforts and progress updates
On April 4, the Foundation released an update noting that they have been able to recover about $500,000 of the stolen funds. The foundation clarified that even though the total stolen funds at the time were not properly accounted for, they have recovered 63% of it.
According to the platform, refunding users affected by the breach is the right step towards the platform’s sustainability. Hackers did not generally experience a high degree of success in getting away with stolen funds in March. According to data from blockchain security platform PeckShield, more than $100 million stolen via hacks were recovered last month. While the total accumulated stolen funds were in the millions, around 52% of them were recovered. In its data, the platform noted that most of the recovered funds were tied to funds stolen from Munchables, a game developed on the Blast network.