Unclaimed ETH From The DAO Hack To Be Used For Security Fund


Unclaimed Ethereum tokens from the infamous 2016 hack on The DAO will be redirected into a new security fund aimed at strengthening the network, says Ethereum advocate Griff Green.

“There’s a lot of money just sitting in random contracts that were supposed to be returned to people who were affected by the hack,” Green said in an interview on Thursday with Unchained podcast host Laura Shin, reiterating plans to launch the security fund. 

The DAO was a decentralized autonomous organization that an anonymous hacker exploited in June 2016 to siphon more than $50 million worth of Ether at the time.

The incident led to a hard fork of the Ethereum blockchain to recover the funds, splitting the community and ultimately creating two separate chains: Ethereum and Ethereum Classic.

Griff Green spoke to Laura Shin on the Unchained podcast on Thursday. Source: Unchained

Green explained that the hard fork returned a lot of the Ether (ETH) held in The DAO to tokenholders, but the claims process was not straightforward. Green said that certain “edge cases” were handled through a multisignature wallet he joined, involving around $6 million. 

While more than 80% of those funds have since been claimed, the remaining balance is now worth around $200 million. “We’re going to stake them and use the revenue to actually support Ethereum security,” he said.

Making Ethereum safer than a bank is the goal

“It makes sense that The DAO is now going to be focused on security,” Green said.

“We really want to stick to our guns with The DAO and live up to the name of The DAO, so we’re going to focus on DAO-style distributions,” he said.