穩健,是 Gate 持續增長的核心動力。
真正的成長,不是順風順水,而是在市場低迷時依然堅定前行。我們或許能預判牛熊市的大致節奏,但絕無法精準預測它們何時到來。特別是在熊市週期,才真正考驗一家交易所的實力。
Gate 今天發布了2025年第二季度的報告。作爲內部人,看到這些數據我也挺驚喜的——用戶規模突破3000萬,現貨交易量逆勢環比增長14%,成爲前十交易所中唯一實現雙位數增長的平台,並且登頂全球第二大交易所;合約交易量屢創新高,全球化戰略穩步推進。
更重要的是,穩健並不等於守成,而是在面臨嚴峻市場的同時,還能持續創造新的增長空間。
歡迎閱讀完整報告:https://www.gate.com/zh/announcements/article/46117
Alameda Lost $190M to Hacks, Claims Former Engineer
Aditya Baradwaj, a former engineer at bankrupt crypto exchange FTX’s sister trading firm, Alameda Research, revealed that the firm lost close to $190 million to hackers in three separate incidents. Interestingly, these incidents were not publicly disclosed, among other things that are gradually coming to light amidst the trail of Sam Bankman-Fried, also known as SBF in the crypto space.
According to Baradwaj, Alameda Research lost $100 million in one incident where a trader clicked on a phishing link. These links are known for draining the wallets of the people clicking them while being disguised as genuine websites. However, the former engineer confirmed that this wasn’t the only time money was drained from SBF’s pockets.
Baradwaj took to social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter) to reveal that “the 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.” As a result, the engineering team had to implement extra checks on Alameda’s internal wallet software.
According to the former Alameda engineer, Bankman-Fried “believed that the single most important thing for a startup like Alameda … was being able to move very, very fast, so much so that he decided to ignore engineering and accounting practices that are considered standard at tech companies and financial services firms.”
Baradwaj added that while yielding on a new blockchain with “questionable legitimacy,” the creator of the blockchain held the funds belonging to Alameda hostage, costing the trading firm more than $40 million. Lastly, the engineer confirmed that an old version of the firm’s plaintext keys file was leaked, likely by a former employee. The attacker transferred funds out of some exchanges and placed bad orders, costing the firm more than $50 million
The former employee stated that “even after all these incidents, no serious attempt was made to change the way we operated.”
As earlier reported by Bitnation, SBF planned to raise capital via an investment from the Saudi Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman, according to the prosecutor’s key witness, Caroline Ellison. She added that despite her role as CEO of Alameda, SBF was actively managing both the company and FTX.