Shocking Exposure! Sui Violently Blocks Hacker's Assets! Has Decentralization Become the 'Emperor's New Clothes'?

Decentralization has always been regarded as the core belief of blockchain, but this series of actions by the Sui network seems to have delivered a loud slap to the entire crypto world.

Recently, the Cetus protocol was attacked by hackers, with the amount involved reaching up to $160 million. The hackers intended to transfer the stolen funds and escape, but instead encountered an 'invisible wall'—the Sui node validators collectively 'refused service'. The hacker's wallet was clearly full, yet the system ignored it, just like having money in a bank card but not finding an ATM to withdraw it.

What’s even more absurd is that some of the stolen funds attempted to transfer across chains to Ethereum, and Sui immediately stated: we will not recognize coins that have left, and are willing to take the loss.

But the real issue exposed is: this 'quick response' indicates that this chain is not some truly decentralized system where everyone is equal, but rather an 'alliance game' dictated by a minority of core nodes.

Don't just focus on Sui; other mainstream POS chains are the same: the concentration of validator power can decide the fate of your account with the price of a cup of coffee. The so-called 'decentralization' is merely a pretty marketing poster.

Sui claims it will return some assets to users, but as long as validators do not package the relevant transactions, this money will forever be just a 'phantom on the chain'—you can see it, but you can never touch it.

The question arises:

Does Sui have undisclosed 'super privileges'? Is it willing to disclose the underlying code of the freezing mechanism?

Is decentralization a technological belief or just a cover-up?