
CuriouslyCory.eth
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CuriouslyCory.eth
@CuriouslyCory
Principal Full Stack Engineer @ sudorandom Web(3) Developer, Maker, Philosophy🤯. Top buyer, bottom seller. Views are my own. Not financial advice.



@Churro808 @miladydid911 what’s missing from sudo





sudoswap is now live on the @base network >s< Read more below ↓

FINAL TIMELINE AND UPDATE TO CUSTOMERS: 4:49pm CET: Ledger Connect Kit genuine version 1.1.8 is being propagated now automatically. We recommend waiting 24 hours until using the Ledger Connect Kit again. The investigation continues, here is the timeline of what we know about the exploit at this moment: - This morning CET, a former Ledger Employee fell victim to a phishing attack that gained access to their NPMJS account. - The attacker published a malicious version of the Ledger Connect Kit (affecting versions 1.1.5, 1.1.6, and 1.1.7). The malicious code used a rogue WalletConnect project to reroute funds to a hacker wallet. - Ledger’s technology and security teams were alerted and a fix was deployed within 40 minutes of Ledger becoming aware. The malicious file was live for around 5 hours, however we believe the window where funds were drained was limited to a period of less than two hours. - Ledger coordinated with @WalletConnect who quickly disabled the the rogue project. - The genuine and verified Ledger Connect Kit version 1.1.8 is now propagating and is safe to use. - For builders who are developing and interacting with the Ledger Connect Kit code: connect-kit development team on the NPM project are now read-only and can’t directly push the NPM package for safety reasons. - We have internally rotated the secrets to publish on Ledger’s GitHub. - Developers, please check again that you’re using the latest version, 1.1.8. - Ledger, along with @Walletconnect and our partners, have reported the bad actor’s wallet address. The address is now visible on @chainalysis. @tether has frozen the bad actor’s USDT. - We remind you to always Clear Sign with your Ledger. What you see on the Ledger screen is what you actually sign. If you still need to blind sign, use an additional Ledger mint wallet or parse your transaction manually. - We are actively talking with customers whose funds might have been affected, and working proactively to help those individuals at this time. - We are filing a complaint and working with law enforcement on the investigation to find the attacker. - We’re studying the exploit in order to avoid further attacks. We believe the attacker’s address where the funds were drained is here: 0x658729879fca881d9526480b82ae00efc54b5c2d Thank you to @WalletConnect, @Tether_io, @Chainalysis, @zachxbt, and the whole community that helped us and continue to help us identify and solve this attack. Security will always prevail with the help of the whole ecosystem.






NEW podcast episode is up! Sam Corcos (@SamCorcos), Co-Founder of Levels (@levels) — The Ultimate Guide to Virtual Assistants, 10x Delegation, and Winning Freedom by Letting Go (Plus: Creating Leverage with Tools, Systems, and Processes) Please enjoy! 🙌 tim.blog/2023/09/20/sam…







