FTX’s sister hedge fund, Alameda Research, lost at least $190 million of its trading funds due to arguably avoidable scams, according to a former engineer at the firm.
In an Oct. 12 post to X titled “The Hacks,” former Alameda Research engineer turned whistleblower Aditya Baradwaj claims that the firm’s “breathtaking” agility led to “major security incidents” as often as every few months.
Incident #1:
An Alameda trader got phished while trying to complete a DeFi transaction by accidentally clicking a fake link that had been promoted to the top of Google Search results
Cost: $100M+
Postmortem: Implemented extra checks on our internal wallet software
In an example of one of the biggest exploits, Baradwaj claims a trader at Alameda once lost more than $100 million of the firm’s funds after clicking a malicious link promoted to the top of Google Search results.
The trader was attempting to sign off on a decentralized finance transaction, said Baradwaj.
In another example, he said Alameda was yield farming on a new blockchain of “questionable legitimacy” — a move that saw the trading firm eventually rack up losses of more than $40 million.
Baradwaj wrote that FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried believed that the “single most important thing” for Alameda and FTX was their ability to move quickly. This ethos led to Alameda routinely ignoring industry-standard engineering and accounting practices for such firms, he said.
“This meant virtually no code testing and incomplete balance accounting. Safety checks for trading would only be added on an as-needed basis,” wrote Baradwaj.
“Blockchain private keys and exchange API keys were stored in plaintext in a file that several employees could access.”
This led to another security incident that cost the firm millions after an old version of the plaintext files containing keys to Alameda’s wallets were leaked.
The attacker transferred funds out of “some exchanges,” and the incurred losses tallied up to more than $50 million, explained Baradwaj.
These are just a few incidents – there’s many more, including from before my time at the company.
FTX had its own issues, including the MobileCoin fiasco that Gary recently testified about during the trial.
He said that Alameda suffered through “many more” incidents of similar scope to the ones he’d described, but many of these were before his time at the company.
Baradwaj’s comments come amid former Alameda CEO Caroline Ellison taking the stand to testify against Bankman-Fried on the sixth day of his fraud trial. In the preceding days, a number of former colleagues, including Adam Yedidia and Gary Wang, have brought a wealth of new evidence against the former billionaire.
Former anti-corruption minister Tulip Siddiq is set to face trial later this month over corruption allegations in Bangladesh.
Ms Siddiq resigned from her ministerial role earlier this year over accusations she illegally received a plot of land in a new high-end development on the outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh’s capital, from her aunt, Sheikh Hasina, who was ousted as prime minister last year.
Bangladesh’s Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) claims the Labour MP received a 7,200sq ft plot in the diplomatic zone through “abuse of power and influence”.
The ACC confirmed Ms Siddiq’s case is due to be heard in Bangladesh on 11 August.
A top official at the Commission told Sky News that if the Labour MP refuses to attend court on this date, a trial will be held in her absence.
It is understood she will not be present.
Ms Siddiq’s lawyers have denied the allegations against her.
More on Bangladesh
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Image: Tulip Siddiq with Sheikh Hasina in 2009. Pic: Reuters
Sky News understands an article published on Thursday morning saying the Labour MP for Hampstead and Highgate will face trial in Bangladesh over the allegations is the first Ms Siddiq had heard of the court date.
A source close to Ms Siddiq told Sky News her lawyer was in court every day last week to request information, but was denied it.
An ACC official said Ms Siddiq’s lawyer “was absent in the court” when the court order was issued on Thursday.
They added that the order relates to three cases involving Ms Siddiq and others – all regarding corruption around the Purbachal new town project.
The Commission will continue to take steps “to ensure justice against the perpetrators”, the official said.
Ms Siddiq’s lawyer said: “For nearly a year now, the Bangladesh authorities have been making false allegations against Tulip Siddiq.
“Ms Siddiq has not been contacted or received any official communication from the court and does not and has never owned any plot of land in Purbachal.
“This longstanding politically motivated smear campaign has included repeated briefings to the media, a refusal to respond to formal legal correspondence, and a failure to seek any meeting with or question Ms Siddiq during the recent visit by the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) to the United Kingdom.
“Such conduct is wholly incompatible with the standards of a fair, lawful, and credible investigation.
“In light of these facts, it is now time for the Chief Adviser and the ACC to end this baseless and defamatory effort to damage Ms Siddiq’s reputation and obstruct her work in public service.”
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‘Leave me alone’: MP tells Bangladeshi authorities
In June, Ms Siddiq accused Bangladesh’s interim leader, Nobel Prize-winning economist Professor Muhammad Yunus, of conducting an “orchestrated campaign” to damage her reputation and “interfere with UK politics”.
In a legal letter seen by Sky News in June, the MP also said comments made by Professor Yunus in a Sky News interview have prejudiced her right to a fair investigation, meaning the corruption inquiries should be dropped.
The interim leader, who took over after Ms Hasina was ousted last year following violent protests, said Ms Siddiq “has so many (sic) wealth left behind here” and “should be made responsible”.
Image: Sheikh Hasina fled Bangladesh after being accused of rigging elections and interfering with the judicial system. Pic: AP/ Yomiuri Shimbun
Professor Yunus’ press secretary said he and the ACC “has no reason and scope to interfere in UK politics”.
“The Anti-Corruption Commission relies not on hearsay but on documentary evidence and witness testimony,” they said.
El Salvador approved indefinite reelection for president and extended terms to six years, sparking backlash from critics warning of increasing authoritarianism.