CrediX Team Suspectedly Pulls Off Exit Scam After $4.5M Hack

TheCryptoTimesPublished on 2025-08-04Last updated on 2025-08-08

The team behind CrediX Finance has fallen silent after a $4.5 million hack, with the protocol’s website, X account, and Telegram chat taken down since Aug. 4. Blockchain security company CertiK says the episode has all the apparent hallmarks of an exit scam in which developers take off with users’ funds. 

The attack was due to a compromised admin wallet that led to bridge exploitation, allowing the hacker to mint unbacked tokens and drain liquidity pools. Stolen funds were bridged from Sonic to Ethereum and diversified in multiple wallets.

Initially, CrediX notified users that it had reached an agreement with the exploiter to reimburse the amount within 24–48 hours in exchange for a payment from its treasury fund, promising complete refunds via an airdrop. 

However, the platform has now completely removed its online presence, including Telegram, and provided no updates subsequently.

Security Firms Monitor the Hack

SlowMist reported that attackers gained access to CrediX’s multisig admin and bridge wallets six days prior to the exploit. This privilege allowed them to mint tokens as collateral and drain liquidity from the platform.

Stability DAO claims it has traced two CrediX team members through KYC information and is drafting a legal report. It is working with other impacted projects like Sonic Labs, Euler, Beets, and Trevee, and authorities to get back funds.

The vanishing is part of a dark year for crypto investors, with $2.5 billion stolen from hacks and scams during the first half of 2025.

Also read: Cybercrime Group GreedyBear Ramps Up $1M in Crypto Heist



Related Reads

77 Bloody Codes: When the '$5 Wrench' Shatters the Privacy Myth of France's Crypto Elite

**Summary** In the first half of 2026, France recorded 77 violent crimes—including kidnappings, illegal confinement, and extortion—targeting cryptocurrency holders, a 71% increase over the 45 cases in all of 2025. This equates to an attack every 2.3 days, making France a global hotspot for so-called "wrench attacks," where criminals use physical violence to coerce victims into surrendering crypto assets. High-profile cases include the 2025 kidnapping of Ledger co-founder David Balland, who was shown with a severed finger in a ransom video, and an attempted kidnapping of the family of Paymium's CEO in Paris. Prosecutors note these are not isolated incidents but part of structured criminal networks, sometimes involving minors. Several factors contribute to France's vulnerability: a large holder base (approx. 7.3 million people), the presence of major crypto firms and executives, a culture of public disclosure among enthusiasts, and potential data leaks. The trend is spreading across Europe, which now accounts for over 40% of such global attacks. Research indicates a correlation between Bitcoin price surges and increased wrench attacks. In response, French Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez announced a three-pillar action plan focusing on enhanced intelligence sharing, deeper cooperation with the industry association Adan, and improved operational and cross-border coordination. Authorities have made over 200 arrests in the past year. Security experts warn that digital asset safety now extends to the physical world. They advise holders to use hardware wallets, avoid disclosing holdings on social media, enable multi-factor authentication, and report suspicious activity. The situation underscores the urgent need for the crypto community to shift from a "show-off" culture to one of discretion as physical security becomes paramount.

marsbit6m ago

77 Bloody Codes: When the '$5 Wrench' Shatters the Privacy Myth of France's Crypto Elite

marsbit6m ago

Both OpenAI and Anthropic are 'Developing Their Own Chips' — Beyond Cost, the Control Over Computing Power is Paramount

OpenAI and Anthropic are both advancing plans to develop custom AI chips, driven by the need to control computing power and reduce costs. According to reports, Anthropic is in early-stage development of its own chips and in talks with Samsung for manufacturing, while OpenAI is collaborating with Broadcom and TSMC, aiming to deploy its first inference chip by late 2026. The primary motivation extends beyond just lowering expenses. For these large model companies, chips are core production assets. By designing specialized hardware (ASICs) tailored to their specific model architectures—OpenAI's being more sparse and Anthropic's more dense—they aim to achieve deeper software-hardware co-design. This synergy can significantly improve inference speed, energy efficiency, and overall unit economics, offering advantages that off-the-shelf GPUs cannot. This move does not signify an immediate replacement for suppliers like Nvidia. The process from design to deployment takes 18-24 months, and Nvidia's GPU ecosystem remains deeply entrenched. Instead, custom chips provide a strategic alternative and negotiating leverage, allowing companies to use them for specific, high-volume workloads like inference while still relying on external GPUs and TPUs for other tasks. The trend reflects a broader industry shift where AI competition is evolving from pure algorithmic prowess to integrated control over the entire software-hardware stack. Companies like Google, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft are already on this path. For foundries like Samsung, securing orders from AI leaders like Anthropic represents a significant opportunity to expand its footprint in the advanced semiconductor market for AI. Ultimately, the race for "computing sovereignty" is now a central battleground for major AI players.

marsbit12m ago

Both OpenAI and Anthropic are 'Developing Their Own Chips' — Beyond Cost, the Control Over Computing Power is Paramount

marsbit12m ago

Trading

Spot
活动图片