29.03.2024

WEF Launches Global Consortium for Crypto Governance

Announced Friday, the consortium seeks to bring together financial institutions, government representatives, developers and other members of the global community to determine what sort of governance around cryptocurrencies can best further the goal of financial inclusion.

The World Economic Forum has created an international consortium to design a governance framework for cryptocurrencies, including stablecoins.

Digital currencies are «a key area of interest for the Forum,» said WEF Founder and Chairman Klaus Schwab. The area «requires input across sectors, functions and geographies.»

“Building on our long history of public-private cooperation, we hope that hosting this consortium will catalyse the conversations necessary to inform a robust framework of governance for global digital currencies,» he said.

The new consortium has buy-in from a number of central banks from developing nations, as well as the Bank of England’s Mark Carney (who has opined on the potential of digital currencies before) and several non-governmental organizations.

David Marcus of the Libra Association, Joe Lubin of ConsenSys and Neha Narula of MIT’s Digital Currency Initiative also praised the effort in a press release.

The news comes just days after the WEF’s blockchain lead, Sheila Warren, and project specialist Sumedha Deshmukh outlined a «Blockchain Bill of Rights» created by the group. A group of central banks also announced last week that they would create a working group to evaluate use cases for the nascent technology.

Weekend Attack Drains Decentralized Protocol dForce of $25M in Crypto

Decentralized finance protocol dForce has lost over 99 percent of its assets in an attack Saturday night, according to DeFi Pulse.Lending protocol Lendf.me saw some $25 million in ether (ETH) and bitcoin (BTC) exit its wallets late Saturday and early Sunday after its money market pool was attacked. Lendf is one of two protocols supported by the dForce Foundation.

“Lendf.me confirmed it was attacked at 8:45 Beijing time Sunday at block height 9899681”, Lendf.me said to Chinese media outlet Chain News. dForce did not respond to CoinDesk’s requests for comment by press time.

Earlier speculation from other DeFi protocol builders say the attack was caused by imBTC, an ethereum token pegged one-to-one with bitcoin, used as collateral that turned out to be fraudulent, enabling the attacker to drain funds for nearly free.

It is unclear whether any users were able to withdraw their funds or if the attacker seized all $25 million. Compound CEO Robert Leshner claimed that the attacker seized the full total.

Lendf’s website read “Do not supply anymore!” with dForce Foundation CEO Mindao Yang saying the team was “still investigating” the incident and urging users to “not supply any asset into lendf.me for now” in the protocol’s open Telegram channel. The website appeared to go down shortly after 04:00 UTC.

After the attack, DeFi Pulse reported Lendf’s accounts holding $18,900 in USD, or about 101 ether (ETH) or 2.6 bitcoin as of press time. After this article was published, that sum fell to $6.

Leshner said on Twitter that the firm “copy/pasted Compound v1 without changes.”

Leshner told CoinDesk on Telegram that the v1 code «was not flawed,» but that the group was cautious about which assets it listed.

«This is a follow-up attack to the imBTC Uniswap attack yesterday,» he said, noting that imBTC is an ERC-777 token and «not a normal Ethereum asset.»

«Smart contracts that include imBTC have to be extra cautious, and write additional code to protect against ‘re-entrancy attacks,’» he said.

A pinned tweet on Lendf’s Twitter page calls it “by far the largest fiat-back stablecoin #DeFi lending protocol.”

The dForce Foundation closed a $1.5 million strategic round led by Multicoin Capital and joined by Huobi Capital and Chinese bank CMB International (CMBI) last week. The funds were intended to grow its staff and launch new DeFi products in the coming year.

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