0xTodd ( thinking )|5月 12, 2026 03:42
This is the most ridiculous claim I've ever seen.
In the rsETH hack incident, the 30,000+ ETH that North Korean hackers fraudulently borrowed from AAVE was frozen by the Arb committee with centralized measures in a swift move.
But then, out of nowhere, an American law firm—representing a large group of creditors who were previous victims of North Korean hackers—stepped in and asked the court to transfer the frozen funds from Arb to them.
Their reasoning? Since the money was already stolen by North Korea, it now counts as North Korean assets. And since it's North Korean assets, they have the right to seize it.
(While I do sympathize with other victims of North Korean hackers, there's no way this logic holds up, right?!?)
AAVE was so spooked that they urgently filed a motion explaining the whole situation.
From the looks of it, the court has reluctantly agreed for now and temporarily transferred the frozen funds to a wallet managed by AAVE.
However, the court still ruled that AAVE is only acting as a custodian and cannot handle the funds on their own until further court instructions.
Let’s hope the court doesn’t mess this up...
Share To
Timeline
HotFlash
APP
X
Telegram
CopyLink