The way I read the article, the “worth millions” is the sum of the ransom demand.

The funny part is that the exploit is in the “smart” contract, ya know the thing that the blockchain keeps secure by forbidding any updates or patches.

  • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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    11 months ago

    For now, sure. However, i will say that i have been buying food woth crypto for over a year now and havent starved yet. And if i wanted a jetski and wanted to pay in crypto i could do so. Fundamentally, crypto and banking are two totally different things because with a bank somebody holds your money. With crypto, you hold your money.

    • Starbuck@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      With crypto, you hold your own money

      You own a cryptographic key that a bunch of strangers have decided points to a spot on a ledger. These strangers have no legal connection to you, but things have been working out pretty well so far because your incentives align.

      As a bunch of Ledger owners are finding out, there are reasons for FDIC insurance of banks and that reason is so that people don’t have to be exposed to the dangers of storing all their money under their mattresses. Everyone recommends getting your crypto into a hardwallet, but what happens when a Ledger update bricks it? Or the company decides to backdoor it to escrow your “private” keys? And what can you do with those hardwallet funds besides HODL? Can you imagine if every time you wanted to spend part of your dirty fiat savings, you had to expose all of it to danger to do so?

      • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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        11 months ago

        As a bunch of Ledger owners are finding out, there are reasons for FDIC insurance of banks and that reason is so that people don’t have to be exposed to the dangers of storing all their money under their mattresses

        The FDIC is a scam. If JPMorgan or Wells Fargo failed they would not have enough to cover the loss. In fact they only hold ~2% of what they insure which would leave 98% of people with nothing. The only reason the FDIC is not bankrupt is because a cascade of banks have not failed all at once

        what happens when a Ledger update bricks it?

        The recent incident was a software supply chain attack. I am not aware of a bricked update but thats not saying much since i dont follow them closely

        the company decides to backdoor it to escrow your “private” keys?

        You lose all trust in them as you should and no longer use their products.

        what can you do with those hardwallet funds besides HODL?

        That is the point of a hardware wallet to hold your funds securely until you want to use them.

        expose all of it to danger to do so?

        Your hardware wallet acts as savings and use a hot wallet as a spend account with less money in it.

      • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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        11 months ago

        They don’t hold my money. I use them as they are supposed to be used. I get in, exchange my crypto, and then immediately withdraw it. They are not meant to hold your money. And true crypto people don’t let them hold their money.