A major Korean exchange just went through a rough patch. Their CEO stepped up publicly, owning up to what he called "internal security flaws" after unauthorized access hit their systems. Here's the damage breakdown: roughly 44.5 billion won caught in the mess—38.6 billion belonging to users, another 2.3 billion frozen mid-investigation, and 5.9 billion the platform's eating as its own loss. The big promise? Every user walks away whole. No funds lost on the customer end, period. Whether that holds up as investigations roll on—that's the real test ahead.
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TokenStorm
· 2025-12-01 12:22
On-chain data shows that the black funds from this round are still in circulation. The CEO's statement about "internal security vulnerabilities" sounds like he's hiding something, and the risk factor is directly pumped up.
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NFTragedy
· 2025-11-30 19:44
It's "internal security vulnerabilities" again, and "zero loss for users"... I've heard this set of statements too many times, can it really be fulfilled?
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ContractBugHunter
· 2025-11-28 12:59
Another exchange has crashed, simply put, it's either an insider or the technology is too poor.
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FalseProfitProphet
· 2025-11-28 12:55
Is it enough for the CEO to come out and admit the mistake? Can they really afford to compensate? Let's wait and see what happens next.
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DogeBachelor
· 2025-11-28 12:54
The CEO comes out to admit mistakes? I've seen this trap too many times, the key is whether they can really compensate; anyone can say nice things.
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BlockBargainHunter
· 2025-11-28 12:47
The Han exchange has run into trouble again. This time, the CEO personally admitted the mistake and even lost money. Do they really treat the users like their parents?
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LazyDevMiner
· 2025-11-28 12:44
The CEO has come out to acknowledge it, which shows some sincerity this time. I'm just afraid that if the investigation drags on, they might change their stance.
A major Korean exchange just went through a rough patch. Their CEO stepped up publicly, owning up to what he called "internal security flaws" after unauthorized access hit their systems. Here's the damage breakdown: roughly 44.5 billion won caught in the mess—38.6 billion belonging to users, another 2.3 billion frozen mid-investigation, and 5.9 billion the platform's eating as its own loss. The big promise? Every user walks away whole. No funds lost on the customer end, period. Whether that holds up as investigations roll on—that's the real test ahead.