The $293 million KelpDAO hack catches why DeFi is finally being forced to grow up
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For years, decentralized finance sold itself on a simple promise: code is law.
Key facts
- But the $293 million KelpDAO exploit that occurred last month exposed an uncomfortable reality for crypto’s infrastructure builders: the industry’s biggest vulnerabilities increasingly have little
- Smart contract risk is largely a solved problem,” said Sam MacPherson, CEO of Phoenix Labs, the developer behind decentralized finance platform Spark
- The contracts in most of these cases did exactly what their authors told them to do,” said Eugene Mamin, the chief technical master at Lido Labs Foundation, to CoinDesk
- Concentration can quietly become systemic risk,” MacPherson of Phoenix Labs said
Summary
The $293 million KelpDAO exploit exposed how modern DeFi’s biggest vulnerabilities increasingly come from infrastructure, governance and operational security and not smart contract bugs, as protocols become deeply interconnected through bridges, third-party software and shared dependencies. Industry leaders building Lido and Spark say the hack is accelerating a broader shift toward “boring,” low-risk DeFi, where investors prioritize reliability, transparency and strong risk management over high yields and rapid growth, especially as institutional capital enters the market. But the $293 million KelpDAO exploit that occurred last month exposed an uncomfortable reality for crypto’s infrastructure builders: the industry’s biggest vulnerabilities increasingly have little to do with the smart contracts themselves. Instead, the danger now lies in the sprawling web of bridges, governance systems, operational security and third-party dependencies that sit around the code, the messy human and infrastructural layer underpinning modern DeFi.