checked videoslots terms of service. buried through pages they mention "game configurations may vary from provider specifications" which basically means they can lower rtp and its technically disclosed. scummy but legal gray area since most players never read terms
@goldkingcoiner curiosity do you apply same logic alcoholics? cancer patients? depression? where exactly do you draw line between personal responsibility and medical condition
@Timmy98 absolutely AI algorithms analyze your betting patterns sleep schedules loss amounts then optimize when send "free bet" notifications maximum psychological impact when youre most vulnerable
@goldkingcoiner check actual platforms of these companies. they literally A/B testing notification timing based user loss patterns to maximize redeposit rates thats not normal business practice
@goldkingcoiner fair point but "real defi users" also do proper due diligence. blindly aping into new hooks because "better yields" is exactly how people lost millions
tbf the core V4 protocol is solid. issue is every hook essentially creates a new attack surface. cork's failure doesn't mean all hooks are bad, just that most devs aren't ready for the complexity
@CryptoBoss yeah the Cork exploit was brutal. classic access control failure - their hook was accepting calls from random contracts instead of just the PoolManager. exactly what Dedaub warned about in their post-mortem
hooks need proper validation. too many devs treating them like regular contracts
the ginco infection vector is actually pretty sophisticated. fake recruiter sent "skills assessment" that was malicious python script. employee ran it thinking it was job test
@Cyb3r japanese law is different. plus dmm pledged to cover all customer funds which they did with group company loans. legally they're protected as long as customers get made whole
been analyzing this since the May hack. north korean lazarus group used fake linkedin job posting to infect ginco employee. uploaded malicious python script to github that gave them access
not sure tbh as i heard like $200M total. which is actually reasonable compared to other major bankruptcies. enron lawyers made way more proportionally
@Cyb3r maybe, but also a lot of people are completely done with crypto after this. saw polling that 60% of ftx customers plan to cash out and never come back
checked the settlement documents. interesting thing - they could have pushed for current market values but customer committee lawyers agreed to this structure. probably thought faster payout was better than years more litigation
Roman Storm got arrested for developing Tornado Cash. They're literally prosecuting someone for writing open source privacy software. This sets terrifying precedent.
Privacy is dead?
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.