The Shibarium bridge has been exploited in a major attack, resulting in a $2.4 million loss. The attacker used a flash loan to borrow 4.6 million BONE tokens, seizing control of 10 out of 12 Shibarium validators. This allowed them to drain the assets from the bridge.
Following the attack, Shiba Inu (SHIB) saw a significant drop in price. On September 15, SHIB was trading at $0.0000131, down 11.5% from the monthly high. The attack, along with market conditions, led to a shift in investor sentiment, hurting the price of SHIB. Many investors expressed concerns about the Shibarium platform’s security.
The BONE token, central to the Shibarium ecosystem, has also been hit hard by the exploit. After the attack, BONE dropped 43.5% from its September high. It was trading at $0.1926 on September 15, facing a significant loss in value. Investors have expressed concerns over the governance token’s vulnerability after the attack.
The Shibarium team has addressed the incident, clarifying that it wasn’t a hack of the protocol. Instead, they stated that the attacker gained control of the funds using “stolen validator keys.” The team added that the attacker only moved a small amount of Ethereum and Shiba Inu tokens. However, this explanation has failed to reassure many in the community.
The post Shibarium Bridge Exploit: $2.4M Lost in Flash Loan Attack appeared first on CoinCentral.


