According to an official Telegram statement on March 1, Singaporean cross-chain crypto wallet developer BitKeep says it has reimbursed 50% of user assets lost during a security breach stemming from Dec. 26, 2022. On the date of the incident, an estimated $8 million was stolen by hackers after BitKeep's APK 7.2.9 (Android Package Kit) installation package was hijacked and swapped. Users who downloaded the malware subsequently saw their private keys compromised, leading to the theft of assets.
As told by BitKeep, a total of 6,731 verified addresses were breached during the incident. The firm has since completed reimbursing 50% of stolen assets in the affected addresses, with "expedited processing" for the remaining 50% of funds. BitKeep says it will complete its compensation plan ahead of schedule and release the remaining funds within two weeks.
In a statement to Cointelegraph, a spokesperson for BitKeep said the company has yet to recover the remaining assets through law enforcement efforts, and all reimbursements are "currently coming out of the company's own pockets, including those to be completed in the near future." As told by the spokesperson:
On Dec. 29, three days after the incident, BitKeep announced that it had alerted law enforcement and would reimburse 100% of users' losses. The wallet currently has over 8 million users worldwide. Last May, the firm raised $15 million in its Series A at a valuation of $100 million.
Dear BitKeepers:Our team has been doing its best to review various compensation possibilities to recover the losses for our users involved since the 729 APK hack safely. The latest update of compensations is as follows: 1/4
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