On February 2023, – RevertFinance was exploited in a arbitrary call, resulting in approximately $30K in losses. That makes the – RevertFinance exploit the 301st largest DeFi incident out of 690 documented in our archive.
Attack Mechanics: How the – RevertFinance Arbitrary Call Played Out
Exploit Class Applied to – RevertFinance
The – RevertFinance incident on February 18, 2023 is classified as a Arbitrary Call. The contract executes an external call with attacker-controlled target or calldata, letting them impersonate the contract. In the full archive, – RevertFinance is 1 of 21 documented arbitrary call incidents.
– RevertFinance in Context
At $30K, the – RevertFinance exploit is a minor (<$1M) event compared to the largest same-class incident in our archive — Seneca (2024) at $6M.
Prior Arbitrary Call Before – RevertFinance
The nearest arbitrary call incident before – RevertFinance was – Dexible, 1 day earlier on February 17, 2023 ($1.5M lost). The same exploit class surfaced again within the arbitrary call attack surface.
– RevertFinance Vulnerability Signature
The primary source categorises the – RevertFinance exploit specifically as “Arbitrary External Call Vulnerability”. This narrower label is entity-specific: it reflects how the – RevertFinance contract failed, rather than the broad arbitrary call pattern alone.
Impact & Recovery for – RevertFinance
– RevertFinance Loss Figure
The – RevertFinance exploit caused $30,000 in losses — a minor (<$1M) incident and the 114th largest of 214 documented in 2023.
Where – RevertFinance Sits Among Arbitrary Call Attacks
Ranked by loss size, – RevertFinance is the 13th largest of 21 arbitrary call incidents documented. That puts the – RevertFinance loss below the class average of $783.5K.
Timeline Since the – RevertFinance Incident
The – RevertFinance exploit occurred 3.2 years ago (1,151 days). The contract, its fork-block, and the attack transaction remain on-chain and forensically reproducible.
Primary Reference for – RevertFinance
Public post-mortem / on-chain analysis for the – RevertFinance incident: view source.
FAQ
How much did – RevertFinance lose?
The – RevertFinance exploit in February 2023 resulted in $30,000 in losses — the 114th largest of 214 DeFi incidents that year.
When did the – RevertFinance hack happen?
The – RevertFinance exploit was recorded on February 18, 2023 — 1,151 days ago.
What type of exploit hit – RevertFinance?
The – RevertFinance incident is classified as a Arbitrary Call. The contract executes an external call with attacker-controlled target or calldata, letting them impersonate the contract.
How common is the Arbitrary Call pattern seen at – RevertFinance?
Our archive contains 21 documented arbitrary call incidents. The – RevertFinance incident is one of them.
How does – RevertFinance compare to the largest Arbitrary Call attack?
The largest arbitrary call incident in our archive is Seneca (2024) at $6M. The – RevertFinance loss is $30K.
How does the proposed defense method manipulate the output?
By adjusting the output confidence scores to mislead attackers.
Does the market significantly value all three ESG pillars?
No, the market values environmental and corporate governance but not social performance significantly.