Completely agree that finding the cause should be the priority. Some people I know have said that unless a plan to ensure that this type of stuff won't happen again is put in place, they don't want to use LEO products. And who can blame them? When money is involved, security is a big concern.
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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?
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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