Flow Foundation lance la phase 2 de son plan de résilience après une exploitation de 3,9 millions de dollars

Le réseau blockchain Flow passe à la vitesse supérieure dans sa stratégie de rebond.
Phase deux activée
La Fondation déploie maintenant des contre-mesures avancées et un cadre de gouvernance renforcé. L'objectif ? Restaurer la confiance des validateurs et des développeurs dApps après l'incident de sécurité.
Les mécanismes de consensus ont subi des audits complets, avec des mises à jour en temps réel pour colmater les vulnérabilités exploitées. L'accent est mis sur la prévention des vecteurs d'attaque similaires, sans compromettre la scalabilité du réseau.
Un retour remarqué
L'écosystème Flow montre des signes de reprise technique, avec une activité on-chain qui reprend sa courbe ascendante. Les partenaires majeurs maintiennent leur intégration, un signal fort pour la santé à long terme de la plateforme.
Leçon apprise ? En crypto, un bug coûte plus cher qu'une équipe de compliance—et les investisseurs ont la mémoire longue. Mais la vraie résilience se mesure à la capacité d'un réseau à transformer une faille en fondation plus solide.
Developers restore EVM as Cadence recovery moves forward
The incident occurred on December 27, 2025, when a variety of NFTs and other assets were transferred off the network – approximately $3.9 million in total – via cross-chain bridges after an attacker exploited vulnerabilities in the execution layer. According to the flow Foundation, the network was halted after validators intervened to stop further losses.
Initially, Flow considered reverting the blockchain to a point in time before the exploit occurred. Critics warned that a reversal of the blocks could also reverse legitimate transactions, hide the bridges and exchanges used to move stolen money, and undermine investor confidence.
Then, after consulting with seniors, the foundation switched course to a targeted recovery approach. This scheme still maintains most valid transactions on-chain and only processes transactions that fail to act correctly. Under this plan, affected accounts have their assets temporarily frozen as forensic analysis is carried out to identify and fully remediate the illicitly minted tokens.
The foundation stated that the “scalpel” approach can enable them to resolve the issue and protect their principles of decentralization – not only for validators, but also for bridge providers, exchanges, and independent forensic partners.
Security breach disrupts the Flow ecosystem and triggers market volatility
The impact of the exploit has been felt throughout Flow’s ecosystem. The network freeze also temporarily shut down certain services, like the nft lending service, where “a small percentage” of borrowers were unable to repay their maturing loans due to the transactions that came to a standstill.
Investors have already felt the impact of the incident. The Flow token (FLOW) has dropped sharply across major exchanges as trading resumed. The decline has fueled broader concerns about risk management practices and raised new questions about the strength and credibility of Flow’s network security model.
Flow Foundation said that after the Dec. 27 hack, a lone account had deposited around 150 million of its FLOW tokens — approximately 10% of what has been released so far and about $54 million at time of writing — to a centralized exchange, swapped most of them into other assets like Bitcoin, then cashed out more than $5 million before operations could be ground to a halt. The group attributed this to flaws in the exchange’s AML/KYC controls, which shifted financial risk onto users who may have unknowingly acquired bogus tokens.
Want your project in front of crypto’s top minds? Feature it in our next industry report, where data meets impact.