# Сопутствующие статьи по теме DeFi

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "DeFi", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Post-Mortem of the Venus THE Attack: How to Profit in a Fleeting Window?

Approximately two hours ago, Venus Protocol's THE token was exploited using a classic Mango Markets-style price manipulation attack. The attacker targeted THE, a low-liquidity collateral asset, by depositing it, borrowing other assets, and using those to buy more THE, artificially inflating its price. Once the time-weighted average oracle updated, the inflated price allowed further leveraged borrowing. To bypass THE's borrowing cap, the attacker performed a "donation attack" by transferring THE directly to the vTHE contract, increasing the recognized collateral value. After the first manipulation phase, THE's price stabilized around $0.50. The attacker attempted to further amplify gains by continuing to buy THE, but mounting sell pressure limited price increases and pushed their health factor near 1.0, risking liquidation. The collateral, nominally valued around $30M, had extremely low liquidity, making large-scale liquidation at inflated prices impossible. Recognizing the situation, the writer opened a short position on THE with high leverage, anticipating a price collapse due to overvaluation, illiquidity, and forced selling. After liquidation, THE price plummeted to ~$0.24, below its pre-attack level, resulting in a ~$15K profit for the writer. Venus Protocol was left with ~$2M in bad debt. The attacker likely gained little or lost funds, though may have profited from off-chain positions. The event highlights that nominal collateral value in DeFi does not equal realizable value during liquidity crises.

marsbit03/16 08:37

Post-Mortem of the Venus THE Attack: How to Profit in a Fleeting Window?

marsbit03/16 08:37

Ethereum's "New Cypherpunk" Manifesto: A Return to the Narrative of Privacy

Ethereum's "New Cypherpunk" Manifesto: A Return to Privacy-Centric Narratives In recent years, the crypto industry has been largely dominated by financialization, with narratives centered on asset prices, liquidity, and institutional capital inflows. However, Ethereum's recent emphasis on a "privacy renaissance" and the "new cypherpunk" ethos signals a return to core values. The movement traces back to the 1990s cypherpunk culture, which advocated using cryptography to protect individual privacy, freedom, and censorship resistance in the digital realm. Bitcoin and Ethereum emerged from this ideology, but over time, financial speculation overshadowed these foundational principles. Ethereum’s "new cypherpunk" framework modernizes this ethos with the CROPS principles: Censorship Resistance, Open Source, Privacy, and Security. It also emphasizes permissionless access, trust minimization, and decentralized collaboration. Several factors make this shift timely: advances in zero-knowledge proofs (ZK) and Layer-2 networks enable practical privacy solutions; public blockchain transparency has raised concerns about data exposure; and the rise of on-chain identities necessitates privacy-preserving systems. Ethereum’s call reflects a broader potential shift in industry narrative—from financialization to privacy, digital sovereignty, and user-controlled data. This could redefine Web3 as a infrastructure that balances transparency with selective privacy, fulfilling the cypherpunk vision of a freer, more secure digital future.

marsbit03/16 04:26

Ethereum's "New Cypherpunk" Manifesto: A Return to the Narrative of Privacy

marsbit03/16 04:26

U.S. Tax Collection Reaches Wallet Exchanges from 6 Years Ago? Four-Layer Breakdown of the IRS's New Form

The U.S. IRS has introduced a new audit form requiring taxpayers to disclose all digital asset platforms, wallets, and services used, including exchanges like Coinbase, Binance, and defunct entities like FTX, as well as self-custody wallets such as MetaMask and Ledger. This form, part of a broader tax enforcement strategy, mandates detailed account information and transaction history, with penalties for false declarations under perjury laws. This move is not sudden but results from years of regulatory evolution, starting with the 2017 John Doe subpoena to Coinbase, which compelled the exchange to share user data. The 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act further classified crypto exchanges as "brokers," requiring them to report user data via Form 1099-DA starting in 2025. The IRS employs a four-layer data approach: exchange reports, traditional financial records, blockchain analysis, and audit questionnaires. While centralized exchanges remain key data sources due to KYC requirements, the focus may shift to on-chain protocols like Hyperliquid, where transactions are transparent but identity linkage is weaker. The IRS typically audits up to three years prior, extendable to six for significant underreporting. High-risk groups include those who reported minimal crypto activity despite acknowledging it, discrepancies in 1099-DA forms, and high-frequency traders during the 2017-2021 bull market. Tax professionals advise consulting experts before responding to audits. Globally, tax authorities like the UK's HMRC and Australia's ATO are also tightening crypto tax reporting, signaling a broader regulatory trend.

Odaily星球日报03/16 02:52

U.S. Tax Collection Reaches Wallet Exchanges from 6 Years Ago? Four-Layer Breakdown of the IRS's New Form

Odaily星球日报03/16 02:52

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