A flaw in this popular crypto wallet could put your stash at serious risk

Bitcoin SV
(Image credit: Shutterstock / Diego Ioppolo)

A serious security flaw has been identified in crypto wallet Electrum SV, which has caused some users to lose their Bitcoin SV (BSV) funds.

Bitcoin SV is a fork of Bitcoin Cash, designed to improve the speed at which transactions are processed. However, to optimize for speed, BSV watered down some of the technical features in place to ensure coins remain secure in transit.

Namely, BSV did away with the pay-to-script hash (P2SH) feature, used to verify transactions that need to be greenlit by multiple parties (also called multi-signature transactions).

In its stead, developers of the ElectrumSV wallet (and likely others) introduced a feature called accumulator multi-signature, which is now understood to be highly insecure.

Crypto wallet vulnerability

The threat posed by the accumulator multi-signature system has been acknowledged by ElectrumSV, which is taking steps to prevent users from falling victim to transaction hijacking.

“Please do not change the script type of your wallet, and especially do not change it to accumulator multi-signature,” warned ElectrumSV in a tweet. “As one of our users unfortunately found out, it is broken and using it will result in the loss of coins.”

The user in question is said to have lost 600 BSV - worth almost $100,000 dollars at current market rates - as a result of an attack that targeted weaknesses linked with accumulator multi-signature.

According to certain knowledgeable parties, the problem would never have reared its head had proper testing procedures been implemented in advance of public release. Others claim Bitcoin SV should not have adopted an alternative system in the first place.

“This situation would have been avoided entirely had BSV not ripped out the competent, time-tested and highly peer-reviewed mechanisms for multisig by Bitcoin in favor of far less efficient home-brew crypto,” wrote Gregory Maxwell, a developer at Bitcoin Core.

“Kinda makes you wonder what amazing bugs are lurking in their node software or wallets. I can say for sure: I’m not going to run any of it and risk finding out.”

Via CoinDesk

Joel Khalili
News and Features Editor

Joel Khalili is the News and Features Editor at TechRadar Pro, covering cybersecurity, data privacy, cloud, AI, blockchain, internet infrastructure, 5G, data storage and computing. He's responsible for curating our news content, as well as commissioning and producing features on the technologies that are transforming the way the world does business.

Latest in Software & Services
A man sitting at his desk in the evening and using a desktop computer
Office 2021 vs Office 2024: is it time to upgrade?
Microsoft 365 Business app logos
Office 2024 LTSC vs Microsoft 365 Business: what are the differences?
Windows 11 Start menu layout choices: Grid view
Windows 11 vs Linux for business: which operating system should you embrace?
A phone sitting on a laptop keyboard with the Microsoft Outlook logo on the screen.
Gmail vs Outlook for business: which email system is right for your organization?
Windows 11 logo
Windows 11 Pro vs Windows 11 Home: which version is right for you?
Canva HubSpot
HubSpot and Canva team up to level the creative playing field
Latest in News
Man having Windows 11 problems with his laptop
Fed up of adverts creeping into Windows 11? You won’t like Microsoft’s latest update, then, although it does provide some important bug fixes
Apple Siri
Update your Apple device now: iOS 18.3.2 fixes a flaw that could be exploited by hackers
Google Chromecast 2
Chromecasts are still broken – but Google tells fuming owners not to factory reset their devices
ChatGPT
ChatGPT wants to write your next novel, and readers and writers alike should be very worried
Garmin Instinct 3 next to the Apple Watch Ultra 2
New figures claim the smartwatch market just shrunk for the first time ever, and the Apple Watch Ultra 3 is to blame
Hitman: World of Assassination on PSVR 2.
Hitman: World of Assassination hits PSVR 2 soon, finally giving you a reason to dust off your headset