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Bybit CEO floats Ethereum rollback idea – Will the community support it?

3min Read

Can white-hat hackers outsmart the Lazarus Group and recover stolen ETH?

Bybit CEO floats Ethereum rollback idea - Will the community support it?
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  • Whales accumulated 140,000 ETH amid Bybit’s $1.4 billion hack linked to Lazarus Group.
  • Bybit offers a $140 million bounty to recover stolen funds and mitigate losses.

Ethereum [ETH] experienced a notable market shift in the past 24 hours as whales accumulated 140,000 ETH amid rising concerns over security breaches.

This surge in accumulation coincided with a major incident involving Bybit, which suffered a $1.4 billion hack, reportedly linked to the infamous Lazarus Group.

The breach triggered a wave of withdrawals as investors rushed to exit the platform.

Bybit CEO Ben Zhou’s plan of action

In response, Bybit CEO Ben Zhou announced efforts to recover the stolen assets, including launching a bounty program, collaborating with law enforcement, and engaging with the Ethereum Foundation to explore potential solutions.

Zhou also addressed the controversial possibility of rolling back the Ethereum blockchain to reverse the hack’s effects.

 The Bybit CEO took to X (formerly Twitter) and said, 

“I’m not sure if it’s one man’s decision. Based on the spirit of blockchain, maybe it should be a voting process to see what the communities want, but I am not not sure.”

Arthur Hayes joins the fray 

Arthur Hayes, co-founder of BitMEX and a significant ETH holder, recently reached out to Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin with a bold proposition.

Hayes suggested considering a network rollback to help Bybit recover from its devastating $1.4 billion ETH hack.

This idea has sparked debate within the crypto community.

Such a rollback would reverse the blockchain’s state to how it was before the attack, potentially restoring stolen funds but raising questions about the integrity and immutability of the Ethereum network.

Hayes noted, 

“@VitalikButerin will you advocate to roll back the chain to help @Bybit_Official.”

He added,

“My own view as a mega $ETH bag holder is $ETH stopped being money in 2016 after the DAO hack hardfork. If the community wanted to do it again, I would support it because we already voted no on immutability in 2016 [wh]y not do it again?”

Previous rollback incident

The concept of rolling back the Ethereum blockchain isn’t unprecedented.

In 2016, following the infamous DAO hack that drained around $60 million in ETH, the Ethereum community initiated a hard fork.

This split resulted in two separate blockchains: Ethereum Classic [ETC], which retained the original chain including the hacked transactions, and the current proof-of-stake Ethereum network, which reversed the illicit transactions.

This historical precedent now fuels the debate on whether a similar rollback should be considered for the recent Bybit hack.

What’s more?

On-chain analytics firm Lookonchain revealed that the Lazarus Group currently controls around 489,395 ETH, valued at approximately $1.3 billion, along with 15,000 Mantle Restaked ETH (cmETH) spread across 54 wallets.

Linked to North Korea, the group has been actively moving these stolen assets between wallets to obscure their origins and facilitate on-chain laundering.

In response, Bybit launched a 10% bounty program—offering up to $140 million—to incentivize white-hat hackers to help recover the stolen funds. CEO Ben Zhou also extended his gratitude to industry leaders and firms supporting the platform during this crisis.

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Ishika Kumari is a Crypto Analyst and Content Strategist at AMBCrypto, specializing in the analysis of cryptocurrency regulations, market trends, and the socio-political impact of blockchain technology. Her expertise is grounded in her academic background as a graduate of Political Science from the renowned University of Delhi. This discipline has equipped her with a sophisticated framework for analyzing complex governance models, international regulatory landscapes, and the economic principles that underpin decentralized systems. At AMBCrypto, Ishika applies this unique analytical lens to her work. She excels at breaking down intricate subjects—from the technicalities of new protocols to the nuances of global crypto legislation—into clear, accessible, and insightful content. Her primary mission is to bridge the gap between the complexity of the digital asset industry and the everyday reader, ensuring that AMBCrypto's audience is not just informed, but truly understands the forces shaping the future of finance.
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