Malicious actors targeting the crypto space have taken more than $45 million in digital assets from their victims in the month of August alone and a total of $997 million year-to-date (YTD), according to a report shared by the blockchain security firm CertiK.

In the report, CertiK highlighted that exit scams took around $26 million, flash loan attacks took $6.4 million and exploits took $13.5 million from their victims in August 2023. The cybersecurity firm confirmed that the total losses amounted to over $45 million.

<em>Major incidents that happened in August. Source: CertiK</em>

CertiK pointed out that some of the major incidents that contributed to the amount lost include the Zunami Protocol attack, which led to $2.2 million in losses; the Exactly Protocol exploit, which took $7.3 million; and the PEPE (PEPEwithdrawal incident, which led to $13.2 million in losses.

According to CertiK, more than $997 million has been lost to exploits, hacks and scams in 2023 so far. This includes around $261 million lost to flash loan attacks, over $137 million lost to exit scams and more than $596 million lost to exploits.

Related: CertiK drops findings on alleged scammer who stole $1M in crypto

While the losses in August are still high, the amount is significantly lower compared to the losses incurred in the previous month. In July 2023, around $486 million in total losses were recorded by Web3 data outlet De.Fi, with the Multichain exploit alone contributing around $231 million to the total amount lost.

With various factors at play, Multichain officially announced the halting of its operations on July 14. The team cited a lack of funding for operations and a lack of alternative sources of information as the reasons for its shutdown. According to the team, it was unable to contact the CEO since he was taken into custody by Chinese authorities.

Collect this article as an NFT to preserve this moment in history and show your support for independent journalism in the crypto space.

Magazine: $3.4B of Bitcoin in a popcorn tin — The Silk Road hacker’s story

Source