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BTC $60,917.70 -2.90%
ETH $1,571.34 -5.63%
BNB $577.11 -2.12%
XRP $1.09 -3.03%
SOL $62.77 -4.30%
TRX $0.3207 -1.17%
DOGE $0.0811 -3.33%
ADA $0.1568 -4.10%
BCH $224.76 +0.53%
LINK $7.36 -2.37%
HYPE $59.94 -2.56%
AAVE $61.45 -9.83%
SUI $0.7026 -0.89%
XLM $0.1985 +4.80%
ZEC $383.51 +26.89%

The proposal for the "Comet Vulnerability Bounty Program" by Compound DAO did not pass due to insufficient votes, with a support rate exceeding 70%

2023-12-10 08:37:27
Collection

ChainCatcher news, Compound DAO previously initiated the "Comet Vulnerability Disclosure (Fixed) Bounty Program Reward" proposal to reward a blockchain developer who reported and fixed the vulnerability, but the final voting result fell short by 15,000 votes (not reaching the necessary 400,000 statutory support votes). Over 70% of the votes supported this proposal.

It is reported that the pseudonymous developer "KP" discovered a vulnerability in the Compound COMP -1.33% v3 protocol (also known as Comet). According to KP's estimation, this vulnerability would allow hackers to directly steal user funds, but it would be fundamentally unprofitable (stealing $1 million in funds would cost the attacker billions of dollars in gas fees).

After discovering and verifying the vulnerability, KP reported it to Compound and its security partner OpenZeppelin, providing a code repository that included a proof-of-concept simulation of the attack. After the vulnerability was patched, KP proposed to the Compound DAO for a reward of $125,000. This proposal received support from Kevin Cheng, the head of the Compound Labs protocol, and Michael Lewellen, the head of solutions architecture at OpenZeppelin.

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