Atomic Wallet users have been left wanting more answers, despite the decentralized wallet provider finally releasing a full "event statement" about the June exploit — which some estimate has run up to $100 million in losses.
In a June 20, blog post — the first major update from the firm since the June 3 exploit — Atomic Wallet claimed there have been no new confirmed cases after initial reports of the hack.
It has reiterated that “less than 0.1%” of app users were affected. Atomic Wallet has made the claim at least once before in a now-deleted June 5 tweet. The figure is still rebuffed by many online.
June 3rd event Statement. To summarise, less than 0.1% of Atomic app users have been affected. Since then, no new cases have been reported.None of the possible issues are confirmed as potentially causing massive breaches, at least in the latest app versions. Builds are verified… pic.twitter.com/YTcOFpo3M3
Atomic Wallet didn’t point to what exactly led to the exploit, only laying out the four most “probable” causes, including a virus on user devices, an infrastructure breach, a man-in-the-middle attack or malware code injection.
However, none of these scenarios “are confirmed as potentially causing massive breaches," said Atomic Wallet, while adding its “security infrastructure has been updated.”
Additionally, Atomic Wallet said an app update to boost security is being worked on, which is verified “by external auditors.”
However, questions have been swirling around certain aspects of the June 20 statement.
Former smart contract audit head at cybersecurity firm Hacken, Yevhenii Bezuhlyi, asked who the mentioned “external auditors” are and where users can find their statements.
Related: On-chain sleuth ZachXBT sued for libel
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