In April, the decentralized exchange Drift Protocol experienced a significant security breach, impacting approximately $280 million in assets. These types of attacks typically exploit Smart Contract vulnerabilities or fund transfer mechanisms and are considered among the most destructive risks in the crypto industry.
Following the incident, the platform faced several key challenges:

(Source: tether)
Stablecoin issuer Tether announced its support for a $150 million fund recovery plan, providing approximately $127.5 million itself, with the remaining funds coming from undisclosed partners.
This plan is designed as a dynamic process rather than a one-time payout:
This approach emphasizes ongoing operations alongside remediation, reducing the strain of a lump-sum payout while encouraging platform reactivation.
As part of the relaunch plan, Drift Protocol will adjust its core mechanisms. The most significant change is shifting settlement assets from USDC to USDT, marking a change in stablecoin preference and highlighting the different roles issuers play during risk events. The platform will also participate in the compensation process, gradually making up user losses through trading revenue and operational recovery.
Another key issue concerns the response by stablecoin issuer Circle. Blockchain analysis indicates that attackers used cross-chain tools to transfer over $232 million, moving funds from the Solana network to Ethereum over several hours.
Critics have pointed out that the funds were not frozen during this period, sparking industry debate over whether stablecoin issuers should proactively intervene and how to balance decentralization with Risk Control. Additionally, investigations suggest the attackers may be linked to North Korean organizations, further increasing the sensitivity of the incident.
This event reflects a growing trend: the crypto industry is increasingly adopting collaborative recovery strategies in response to major security incidents.
Key features include:
Shared risk among multiple parties Responsibility is no longer shouldered by a single platform; external funds and partners are involved.
Staged compensation mechanisms This approach avoids the financial strain of a one-time payout.
Prioritizing operational recovery Restoring platform cash flow serves as a source of compensation.

(Source: Drift Protocol)
Drift Protocol is a decentralized exchange (DEX) built on the Solana blockchain, specializing in efficient Derivative trading. Its core product is a Perpetual Futures trading marketplace that leverages an Automated Market Maker (AMM) mechanism, enabling users to experience seamless, low-latency on-chain trading.
As one of the early DEXs in the Solana ecosystem, Drift Protocol has accumulated billions of dollars in trading volume and steadily built its market reputation. Leveraging Solana’s high throughput and low Trading Fee structure, Drift has enhanced DeFi trading efficiency and expanded the practical use cases for Decentralized Finance.
The Drift Protocol incident is more than just a hack—it reveals a shift in crypto market risk management. Tether’s involvement, changes in stablecoin selection, and debates over fund freezing responsibilities all demonstrate that the crypto industry is working toward a new balance between decentralization and Risk Control.





