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RE: LEO Roundtable: WLEO Hack Aftermath and Rebuilding

in LeoFinance4 years ago

I don't know enough about Ethereum smart contracts, so forgive me if this is a stupid question: If it turns out the keys were compromised and there's nothing wrong with the actual contract, does that mean we can just pick up where we left off on the wLEO-wETH pool, and change nothing, apart from the key involved?

Or is the compromised (public) key somehow hard-coded into the contract in some way, thereby requiring a replacement contract?

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I don't know myself either. I'm not a big user of ETH. I'd wait for someone who know to come around to answer it.

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