January 24, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

MyEtherWallet Warns of [Another] Hack, Urges Hola Users to Move Funds

Myetherwallet warns of [another] hack, urges hola users to move funds

MyEtherWallet Warns of [Another] Hack, Urges Hola Users to Move Funds


Myetherwallet
Advertisement

Popular Ethereum wallet interface and token wallet MyEtherWallet is – yet again – at the center of a significant security breach and has warned its users utilizing a popular VPN to move their funds.

MyEtherWallet (MEW) is now reeling from its second major security compromise in under three months after claiming hackers compromised Hola, a free virtual private network (VPN) service, for a five-hour period that may have left Google Chrome users’ crypto wallets compromised for merely having installed the Hola extension.

The security compromise may have enabled hackers to monitor users’ activity if they had used their MEW wallets during the time period, the company warned, urging users to move their funds out of their existing wallets – if they still have access to their tokens.

MEW said in a statement on its Twitter profile:

“Urgent! If you have Hola chrome extension installed and used MEW within the last 24 hrs, please transfer your funds immediately to a brand new account!”

Notably, regular users who haven’t installed the extension aren’t impacted by the breach since the security compromise stems from Hola, a service that has been heavily scrutinized in recent years after admitting to using its users’ bandwidth to create a giant botnet.

The origin of the attack seems to have “appeared to be a Russian-based IP address”, MEW told TechCrunch while insisting that the wallet operator does not store any users’ credentials or personal data.

The number of users impacted by the breach isn’t immediately clear at press time.

It was only April when MEW fell prey to a DNS hijack that allowed a malicious hacker to redirect its users to a malicious replica of the website to phish their private keys. The hacker was able to siphon some 215 ETH (approx. $150,00 at the time) from the attack.

As suggested by CCN editor Josiah Wilmoth at the time, users are strongly advised to use browser extensions that offers safeguards against phishing scams by maintaining a blacklist of malicious websites. Two popular extensions for Chrome users are EtherAddressLookup and MetaMask.

Featured image from Shutterstock.

Follow us on Telegram or subscribe to our newsletter here.
Join CCN’s crypto community for $9.99 per month, click here.
Want exclusive analysis and crypto insights from Hacked.com? Click here.
Open Positions at CCN: Full Time and Part Time Journalists Wanted.

Advertisement


Published at Tue, 10 Jul 2018 13:15:19 +0000

Ethereum News

Previous Article

SOK RONALDO U JUVENTUSU ZA 100 MILIONA!!!

Next Article

New York, NY – Intro To Forex & Cryptocurrency Trading & A Life Changing Opportunity

You might be interested in …

South Korea Moves to Regulate Domestic Bitcoin Trading, Exchanges

South Korea Moves to Regulate Domestic Bitcoin Trading, Exchanges

Since late November 2017, South Korea has looked to regulate cryptocurrency trading in domestic exchanges, including Bithumb, Coinone and Korbit,  The Korea Herald reports. Now, trying to tame the wave of wild cryptocurrency speculation in the country, South Korea is imposing trade bans for minors and looking for ways to impose taxes on investment returns.

South Korea is the world’s third largest market in bitcoin trading, after Japan and the U.S., and the largest exchange market for ether, accounting for more than 33 percent of its market share, according to a recent MIT Technology Review report. The country is also home to two of the top 15 global digital-currency exchanges (Bithumb and Coinone) and believed to have about one million registered daily traders in virtual currencies, which is equivalent to about one out of every 50 citizens.

This is worrying the South Korean government. In September 2017, the country’s Financial Services Commission (FSC) ordered a ban on Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs). In November 2017, the head of South Korea’s Financial Supervisory Service said that the agency was monitoring cryptocurrency trading inside the country, and the country’s National Tax Agency revealed that it was considering a value-added tax, a capital gains tax or both on cryptocurrency trades. If the plan is implemented, South Korea will become one of the few countries to tax cryptocurrency-to-cash exchanges.

The government’s concern is also motivated by the risk of cyberattacks from the country’s rogue neighbor, North Korea. According to South Korea’s National Police Agency, North Korean hackers could be targeting South Korean bitcoin exchanges.

With these newest measures, North Korean banks that offer accounts for cryptocurrency trading will have to verify the identification of new account holders and prohibit minors from opening accounts. Woori Bank and Korea Development Bank will shut down virtual accounts offered to cryptocurrency exchanges before year-end, according to the banks.

The regulators will also bar financial institutions from investing in or obtaining cryptocurrencies, and is considering ways to oblige cryptocurrency exchange operators to verify users’ real names, strengthen storage security of encryption keys, and disclose purchase price and order volumes. The authorities will also take strong-handed punitive actions against the perpetrators of cryptocurrency-related scams.

In a press release, the government said that the new regulations were necessary “to prevent a general public without expertise from suffering losses by participating in virtual currency investments that have massive fluctuations.”

These issues were discussed on Wednesday, December 13, 2017, in a meeting presided over by Hong Nam-ki, minister of the Office for Government Policy coordination, and attended by officials from the ministries of justice, finance, and science and ICT, as well as from the Financial Services Commission, the Korea Communications Commission, the Fair Trade Commission and the National Tax Service.

While some news headlines are presenting this as a catastrophic development that will shut down the cryptocurrency industry in South Korea, the initiative of the South Korean authorities is in line with current trends toward stronger cryptocurrency regulations in China, Europe and the U.S.

“A right set of regulations will rather nurture the (virtual currency) market, and we would welcome that,” Bithumb representatives told Reuters, adding that such a code of conduct could add legitimacy to the market.

The post South Korea Moves to Regulate Domestic Bitcoin Trading, Exchanges appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

O que é Bitcoin? O Genesis da Blockchain

YouTube: blockchain O que é bitcoin? O Genesis da Blockchain Chat para abordar um pouco da história do bitcoin, suas características e proposta. more info… YouTube: cryptocurrency Attorney Corey Silverstein Discussed Cryptocurrency in TrantraPunk Interview […]