Shiba Inu developers have issued a final ultimatum to the hacker behind the Shibarium bridge exploit. The team increased its bounty offer to 25 ETH, calling it the last chance to return the stolen assets.
Shiba Inu’s development team confirmed the 25 ETH bounty through an on-chain message recorded on the Ethereum blockchain. The team stressed that the hacker’s blacklisted tokens now hold no usable value.
The hacker had previously rejected two earlier offers of 5 ETH and 20 ETH. Instead, he demanded 50 ETH from the Shiba Inu community.
Developers made clear that this new proposal is final and will not be raised again.
The team urged the hacker to accept the offer and end the standoff peacefully.
The Shiba Inu developers emphasized that the stolen tokens are permanently blacklisted. They warned that keeping them offers no benefit.
The developers underlined that these assets cannot be transferred or exchanged.
Lead developer Shytoshi Kusama confirmed that a “war room” had been created to coordinate the recovery efforts. This team continues to monitor on-chain movements related to the stolen funds.
Following the September exploit, Shiba Inu developers implemented several upgrades to strengthen Shibarium’s infrastructure. The improvements aim to remove single points of failure and prevent similar breaches.
The team temporarily suspended the Shibarium legacy RPC endpoint while installing new anti-hack measures. Activity on the network was restored after a 10-day shutdown.
Developers have also created a smart contract that allows the hacker to claim the bounty securely. Before receiving payment, the attacker must authorize the transfer of the frozen KNINE tokens.
Affected users, however, still await updates about their lost assets. The Shiba Inu team has not announced any restitution timeline yet.
In a separate development, fund manager T. Rowe Price filed for a Shiba Inu ETF. This marks the first potential exchange-traded product tied to the meme token.
The filing aims to renew investor confidence in the Shiba Inu ecosystem following recent setbacks. Market watchers are monitoring regulatory responses closely.
The team continues to reassure users of its commitment to network security and transparency. For now, the hacker faces a clear choice to accept 25 ETH or lose everything permanently.
The post Shiba Inu Warns Hacker: Final 25 ETH Bounty or Lose Everything Forever appeared first on CoinCentral.


