On June 2024, Will was exploited in a business logic flaw, resulting in approximately $52K in losses. That makes the Will exploit the 264th largest DeFi incident out of 690 documented in our archive.
Attack Mechanics: How the Will Business Logic Flaw Played Out
Exploit Class Applied to Will
The Will incident on June 28, 2024 is classified as a Business Logic Flaw. A business-logic bug in the contract — such as an incorrect formula or missing state update — lets the attacker withdraw more than their share. In the full archive, Will is 1 of 144 documented business logic flaw incidents.
Will in Context
At $52K, the Will exploit is a minor (<$1M) event compared to the largest same-class incident in our archive — – EulerFinance (2023) at $200M.
Prior Business Logic Flaw Before Will
The nearest business logic flaw incident before Will was APEMAGA, 1 day earlier on June 27, 2024. The same exploit class surfaced again within the business logic flaw attack surface.
Impact & Recovery for Will
Will Loss Figure
The Will exploit caused $52,000 in losses — a minor (<$1M) incident and the 76th largest of 188 documented in 2024.
Where Will Sits Among Business Logic Flaw Attacks
Ranked by loss size, Will is the 49th largest of 144 business logic flaw incidents documented. That puts the Will loss below the class average of $6.08M.
Timeline Since the Will Incident
The Will exploit occurred 1.8 years ago (655 days). The contract, its fork-block, and the attack transaction remain on-chain and forensically reproducible.
FAQ
How much did Will lose?
The Will exploit in June 2024 resulted in $52,000 in losses — the 76th largest of 188 DeFi incidents that year.
When did the Will hack happen?
The Will exploit was recorded on June 28, 2024 — 655 days ago.
What type of exploit hit Will?
The Will incident is classified as a Business Logic Flaw. A business-logic bug in the contract — such as an incorrect formula or missing state update — lets the attacker withdraw more than their share.
How common is the Business Logic Flaw pattern seen at Will?
Our archive contains 144 documented business logic flaw incidents. The Will incident is one of them.
How does Will compare to the largest Business Logic Flaw attack?
The largest business logic flaw incident in our archive is – EulerFinance (2023) at $200M. The Will loss is $52K.
How do I4.0 technologies contribute to disaster risk reduction in SHSCs?
Through predictive capabilities, early disaster anticipation, and improved responsiveness.
What base cryptographic schemes are used for the proposed adaptor signature schemes?
The proposed schemes are based on the Schnorr and Dilithium signature schemes.