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AI Hack Acceleration in DeFi: Why Key Management Now Matters More Than Code Audits

Wallet compromise surpasses code bugs in 2026 as AI-driven phishing targets DeFi keys. New data and real incidents show why key operations now outrank audits.

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AI Hack Acceleration in DeFi: Why Key Management Now Matters More Than Code Audits

The message arrives at 03:12 UTC: “Treasury wallet drained?” Your cold palms hover over the keyboard as you watch approvals propagate across BNB Chain mempools. The attacker isn’t exploiting a contract bug.

They’re signing transactions with your keys. Within hours, an otherwise healthy token charts a vertical line down. Market makers pull quotes; Discord fills with grainy screenshots and unhelpful certainty.

Someone says, “But we passed two audits.” Nobody asks the only question that matters: Who still controls the keys? In DeFi’s AI era, the dominant failure mode has moved from code to custody.

Key management—not audits—now decides survival. Automation has compressed the time between compromise and capital flight. Sophisticated phishing, deepfake voice calls, and “approval mining” bots mean the path of least resistance is no longer a subtle reentrancy bug—it’s a signer making a single bad decision, or a compromised machine doing it for them.

As AI scales social engineering, private keys become the single point-of-failure that can unwind months of engineering in minutes—no exploit payload required. This is not hypothetical. A private-key compromise at Humanity Protocol in early June 2026 reportedly drained over $30 million from 17 wallets and sent the H token down more than 80% intraday, with attackers even minting additional H on BNB Chain (CoinDesk).

Data backs the pivot. In its June 2026 threat report, CertiK notes that bridge-related incidents alone have totaled over $328 million this year and that wallet compromise has overtaken code vulnerabilities as the dominant exploit vector by value (CertiK Skynet (CertiK)). Even in a relatively quieter month for hacks—about $68.

3 million in May across 60 incidents—phishing still chipped in roughly $2.6 million, with only ~$9.4 million recovered (CoinCentral (reporting CertiK Alert)).

From Code Bugs to Key Theft: How the Attack Surface Flipped Why the balance shifted Protocol audits have improved the baseline. Common bugs

Nguồn: Crypto Daily

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