
DogWifTools, a software frequently utilized by cryptocurrency scammers, has reportedly been exploited, resulting in the draining of over $10 million from its user base. This tool, known for bundling malicious token launches, was compromised, leading to the theft of identities and funds from its clientele. Reports indicate that the exploit was linked to a GitHub compromise, and the attackers managed to access scammer computers by requesting malicious permissions. In a separate incident, a hacker drained $29 million from the SUI network, laundering the funds through Tornado Cash. This attack highlighted vulnerabilities in Sui's tracking tools, which failed to adequately trace the movements of the stolen assets.






$29M in SUI Drained - Same Playbook, New Targets A hacker pulled $29M out of SUI, bridged it to Ethereum, and washed it through Tornado Cash. ZachXBT traced the exploit, but Sui’s block explorers aren’t built to track this kind of movement - a major security gap for a growing… https://t.co/3BAADqLAP0
$29M in SUI Gone - And Nobody Saw It Coming Another major exploit, this time draining $29M in SUI before being laundered through Tornado Cash. The attack, uncovered by ZachXBT, exposed a major blind spot - Sui’s tracking tools aren’t robust enough to trace movements… https://t.co/9W3xBumZ08
The tables were turned on memecoin scammers as DogWifTools, a bundling tool commonly used for malicious token launches, was exploited for $10M https://t.co/uuj8wWAWBN https://t.co/LpcWBJuERb