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by wyldfire
3265 days ago
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Last time the problem was that a weakness in the contract's definition was exploited, right? This time it's a "hack" where someone gained unauthorized access to a webpage and modified it somehow? IMO if there were ever a case for hardforking around problems it should be for the latter and not the former. Maybe Ethereum could publicly declare itself to be a "not-too-centralized" consensus-audited-by-this-particular-committee-of-humans. |
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