On January 2023, – OmniEstate suffered a other — the first of 188 documented other incidents in our archive where the loss figure was not publicly disclosed but the exploit pattern is documented below.
Attack Mechanics: How the – OmniEstate Other Played Out
Exploit Class Applied to – OmniEstate
The – OmniEstate incident on January 17, 2023 is classified as a Other. A specific exploit class outside the most common buckets. In the full archive, – OmniEstate is 1 of 188 documented other incidents.
– OmniEstate in Context
The – OmniEstate incident joins a class whose largest loss to date is MIMSpell (2024) at $65M.
Prior Other Before – OmniEstate
The nearest other incident before – OmniEstate was – UFDao, 6 days earlier on January 11, 2023 ($90K lost). The same exploit class surfaced again within the other attack surface.
– OmniEstate Vulnerability Signature
The primary source categorises the – OmniEstate exploit specifically as “No Input Parameter Check”. This narrower label is entity-specific: it reflects how the – OmniEstate contract failed, rather than the broad other pattern alone.
Impact & Recovery for – OmniEstate
– OmniEstate Loss Figure
The loss figure for – OmniEstate is not publicly disclosed. The primary source reports the exploit in non-USD terms, so no USD estimate is published here. For reference, the average loss across 188 other incidents in our archive is $2.03M.
Timeline Since the – OmniEstate Incident
The – OmniEstate exploit occurred 3.2 years ago (1,183 days). The contract, its fork-block, and the attack transaction remain on-chain and forensically reproducible.
Primary Reference for – OmniEstate
Public post-mortem / on-chain analysis for the – OmniEstate incident: view source.
FAQ
How much did – OmniEstate lose?
The – OmniEstate loss figure is not publicly disclosed. The primary source reports the exploit in non-USD token terms, so no USD estimate is published here.
When did the – OmniEstate hack happen?
The – OmniEstate exploit was recorded on January 17, 2023 — 1,183 days ago.
What type of exploit hit – OmniEstate?
The – OmniEstate incident is classified as a Other. A specific exploit class outside the most common buckets.
How common is the Other pattern seen at – OmniEstate?
Our archive contains 188 documented other incidents. The – OmniEstate incident is one of them.
How does – OmniEstate compare to the largest Other attack?
The largest other incident in our archive is MIMSpell (2024) at $65M. The – OmniEstate loss was not publicly disclosed.
What does the study's analysis imply about the predictability of cryptocurrency prices?
The complexity and unique statistical behaviors of cryptocurrencies imply that price movements are challenging to predict with standard financial models.
How does the framework contribute to the decentralization and security of IoT data authentication?
By utilizing public blockchains for secure, verifiable record-keeping without central authority.