Silk Road 2.0 Claims 80% of Stolen Bitcoin Repaid to Customers
Online black market Silk Road 2.0, the marketplace leader in drug listings and total listings, has revealed a new update on the status of its ongoing customer repayment efforts. The reimbursement plan was put in motion by Silk Road 2.0 after the site suffered a serious hack in February that resulted in the loss of 4,476 BTC in customer funds ($2.6m at then-market prices). Undeterred, Silk Road 2.0 proposed a seven-point plan that would find moderators going without payment and the site charging a markup on purchases to recoup the losses. Moderator Defcon issued a lengthy statement on a....
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Here's an interesting one. In a newly-posted update on the Silk Road 2 forms, the illicit drug marketplace has announced that just over 82 percent of customers who had funds stolen in an early February hack have been repaid. That hack caused considerable damage, with the amount of bitcoins stolen pegged at 4474, amounting to nearly$3 million at them time (today worth about $2.5 million). Just days later, the marketplace's administrator, Defcon, committed to repay all who lost bitcoins following the calamity. There was hesitation in the community, even doubt. But he has seemingly made good....
Editor's Note: The transactions revealed by Defcon only show a total of 4474.26 BTC stolen from presumably only escrow accounts. This sum comes from transactions by attacker 1 only, and do not include the "contributions" of attackers 2 and 3. The previous incorrect estimate of "over 88,000 BTC" came from user estimates of all funds previously on Silk Road 2.0's wallets, or all funds in the wallets of the suspected attackers. Varying reports of the total amount stolen from Silk Road 2.0 stem from inherent vagueness in Defcon's words. The only concrete estimate, taken from Blockchain data....
On the heels of Ross Ulbricht’s official Silk Road court case, it seems like the site is back online and more powerful than ever. The Silk Road returned under the title, “Silk Road Reloaded,” and claims to be even more private than its TOR predecessor. Utilizing an alternative network, called the Invisible Internet Project (I2P), the Silk Road Reloaded can only be accessed by downloading special software. In order to access the new Silk Road, interested parties need to download I2P software. The website URL is silkroadreloaded.i2p, but standard internet browsers will realize that the site....
A few days ago here at CCN we reported that Bitcoin's black mark Silk Road 2.0 had been hacked. Defcon, in a long post to Silk Road 2.0 forums on Tor, explained that three attackers had used the transaction malleability bug to steal over 4,763 BTC directly from Silk Road's hot wallet. Original estimates still haven't been confirmed but Defcon himself reports that 47% of all users had lost all of their funds. As always, I must warn readers that the majority of things on the Deepweb are not in any way shape or form trustworthy. It is my, and the good Government's advice, to stay away from....
Notorious online black market Silk Road 2.0 lost roughly 4,476 BTC (then roughly $2.6m) early this February when its security was compromised in a transaction malleability attack. However, the repayment plan it subsequently implemented is already seeing success, a new report from Vice suggests. The media outlet indicates that 50% of the site's hacking victims have been completely repaid as of 8th April. Announced on 17th February, Silk Road 2.0's repayment plan sought to reimburse the estimated 47% of its users that lost bitcoins in the breach. To refund the accounts, Silk Road 2.0....