

Finding the group or individuals that stole $285 million worth of crypto from Drift earlier this week may be a tough task in the real world, but the team behind the Solana-based decentralized exchange knew exactly where to find its attackers on-chain.
On Friday, Drift said in a post on X that it had sent messages on Ethereumâs network to four wallets holding massive amounts of stolen crypto, which several security experts have begun linking to the Democratic Peopleâs Republic of Korea: âWe are ready to speak.â
The so-called Hermit Kingdom isnât exactly known for negotiating with projects that its elite hackers siphon funds from, considering that bad actors linked to North Korea have absconded with $6.5 billion worth of crypto in recent years, according to blockchain security firm Elliptic.Â
Critical information of parties related to the exploit have been identified. Drift is now sending an on-chain message from 0x0934faC45f2883dd5906d09aCfFdb5D18aAdC105 to the ETH Wallets that holds the stolen funds.
Wallet 1: 0xAa843eD65C1f061F111B5289169731351c5e57C1 (TimestampâŠ
â Drift (@DriftProtocol) April 3, 2026
Still, the messages indicated that the true identity of whomever facilitated one of the biggest exploits in decentralized finance so far this year may not be truly known yet. Thatâs because the messages focused on the discovery details associated with attackersâ identities.
âCritical information of parties related to the exploit have been identified,â the on-chain messages sent by Driftâs team read. âTo the community, Drift will share further updates as soon as third-party attributions are completed.â
When millions of dollars in crypto get swiped from a DeFi project, on-chain negotiations are a common course of action. Sometimes they work. Several years ago, someone who stole $600 million from Poly Network âfor funâ returned the funds after a lengthy dialogue, for example. Oftentimes, attackers ignore any outreach and associated legal threats.
The probability of seeing Driftâs funds returned if North Korean hackers are involved is zero, according to Michael Egorov, founder of decentralized exchange Curve Finance.
âThey never cooperate and they are not afraid of law enforcement,â he told Decrypt.
However, if the funds werenât swiped by a state-sponsored group, then there is a chance that they'll be returned, he said. If the attackersâ identities are revealed, then he said that the âprobability of them returning funds jumps to almost 100%.â
Ergorov noted that âmaximal extractable valueâ traders can be an exception to the rule. With a strategy that focuses on essentially front-running usersâ transitions to make profitable trades, they can occasionally step in front of hackers trying to abscond with funds.
âWhen they do, they return funds more often than not,â he said, adding that they sometimes hold onto some as a bounty, or leave it up for projects to determine.
Drift signaled earlier this week that the exploit, which has affected projects throughout Solanaâs ecosystem that had built dependencies on the decentralized exchange, stemmed from âsophisticated social engineering.â The attackers were able to gain administrative control over the platformâs security by accessing two private keys.
Elliptic pointed to the attackersâ on-chain behavior and laundering methodologies as factors that led them to believe that hackers linked to North Korea were involved. Still, other security experts suggested that the attackers may have had some degree of insider knowledge.
Itâs unclear who Drift believes the hackers could be, as well as whether the decentralized exchange is willing to offer them a bounty. Nonetheless, its attempt to retrieve funds on behalf of itself and the DEXâs users are public for all to see.
Decrypt has reached out to Drift for comment.
Someone controlling a wallet that holds $200 worth of Ethereum couldnât resist the opportunity to chime in on Friday. In an on-chain message to Driftâs wallet, the individual wagered that the attackers could âsend me $10 million to mess with the Drift team.â
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