Bitfi Closes Wallet Bounty Program, Removes 'Unhackable' From Branding

Published on by Cointele | Published on

Cryptocurrency hardware wallet manufacturer Bitfi has officially closed its bounty program, according to an August 30 tweet, in addition to removing the "Unhackable" claim from the wallet's marketing materials.

The company expressed appreciation for "The work and effort of the researches," stating that the bug bounty program was officially closed.

Bitfi officials remained silent about the $100,000 reward they announced in July.

The recent Bitfi post quickly prompted a response from the community.

Bitfi's executive chairman, cybersecurity pioneer and crypto evangelist John McAfee, had claimed that wallet was "The world's first unhackable device." He further challenged security experts to breach the device for a $100,000 bounty starting July 24.

Photos of Bitfi components surfaced online in late July, prompting some commentators to claim it was "a cheap Android phone," which did not deserve the accolade of the "Most sophisticated instrument in the world".

Though several attempts to hack the Bitfi wallet have been made since then, the company has not paid out any bounties.

As Cointelegraph previously reported, the company responded to the hacking claims and subsequent criticism by calling them an "Army of trolls" hired by hard wallet competitors Trezor and Ledger.

In August, an alleged 15 year old Twitter user Saleem Rasheed cracked the wallet and launched Doom on it.

Hours before the recent statement withdrawing the "Unhackable" definition from the wallet's branding, Rasheed posted a video where he managed to extract a secret phrase from Bitfi using a cold boot attack.

x