They pulled out their laptops and dug into the platform's code, with the help of a handful of acquaintances and Day's cat, Finney (named after Bitcoin pioneer Hal Finney), who perched on his shoulder in support. "All I said was, 'What?'" Kellar recalls. He picked up the phone to hear a breathless Day explaining that the platform had been attacked. Kellar was sitting in his mom's living room six time zones away near Austin, disassembling a DVD player so he could salvage one of its lasers. Day jumped up, spilling his food on the floor, and ran into his bedroom to call Dillon Kellar, a co-founder of Indexed. But he knew enough to be alarmed: A user had bought up certain tokens at drastically deflated values, which shouldn't have been possible. "If you didn't know what you were looking at, you might say, 'Nice-looking trade,'" Day says. The colleague had sent over a screenshot showing a recent trade, followed by a question mark. The text was from a colleague who worked with him on Indexed Finance, a cryptocurrency platform that creates tokens representing baskets of other tokens - like an index fund, but on the blockchain. 14, in a house near Leeds, England, Laurence Day was sitting down to a dinner of fish and chips on his couch when his phone buzzed.
An 18-year-old graduate student exploited a weakness in Indexed Finance's code and opened a legal conundrum that's still rocking the blockchain community.
vscode - Code snippets, to make creating new hacks easier and faster
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We wanted to help Prodigy become more secure, but they've ignored our emails and our requests to talk. We're not trying to break the game because we're evil. Everything is open source, forever free, and without ads.
Also, that repository was privated at the time of us making this repostitory, so we could not reference it While the repository isn't techinally a fork, we have made this repository to continue development ofīecause that repository is archived.