Trust Collapse! Web3 Security Giant "Black Eats Black"? $2.3 Million Vanished Overnight, My Belief in the Crypto Circle Shattered on the Ground

I just saw the news and my hands are shaking! The so-called "Guardian of the Crypto Circle" Hacken actually crashed, their token HAI plummeted from the sky to the basement, halving in price again within 24 hours, and now it's worth less than 1 cent. This is one of the top five blockchain security companies in the world, and their own door has been pried open; that vertical downward red line looks like it jumped straight off a cliff, with a 97% drop turning the holder group into a large lamentation scene. Even more bizarrely, the security agency reported that hackers actually managed to take away $2.3 million through a contract permission vulnerability. This operation really left me dumbfounded: a security company that specifically audits for project parties, but their own contract permissions weren't locked down? This is like a fire prevention expert whose house burned down because they forgot to turn off the gas stove!

Now all kinds of screenshots are spreading like wildfire on platform X, with some saying there were large transfers half an hour before the crash, and others digging out a note from last year's audit report. The announcement that Hacken released at 2:30 AM sent chills down my spine — they didn't even fully understand how the vulnerability occurred and could only tell everyone to pause all transfers. This scene reminded me of last year's cross-chain bridge hack; at that time, the project party was also panicking and issued twelve "Public Safety Notices," and as a result, users' funds are still frozen on the chain.

If even security companies can't defend against hackers, who can we ordinary folks trust? Last year's Luna crash at least allowed us to see the process of the stable mechanism collapsing, but this time it was the so-called experts who help project parties find vulnerabilities every day that were instead robbed by vulnerabilities. No wonder there's an old brother in the community who bitterly laughed and said: "Should project parties hire hackers for security audits in the future?"