The fallout after Bolt’s aggressive fundraising attempt has been wild

money emerging from a firehose

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

This past week was a wild one in the world of fintech as Bolt surprised the industry with a leaked term sheet that revealed it is trying to raise $200 million in equity and an unusual, additional $250 million in “marketing credits.” 

As part of this deal, Bolt wanted a $14 billion valuation bolstered by an aggressive pay-to-play type cramdown that would try and force its existing investors to cough up more cash, too, or essentially lose their stakes to a 1 cent per share buyout.

The industry responded with a collective “We’ll see about that.”

Brad Pamnani, an investor who is spearheading the proposed $200 million equity investment deal, told TechCrunch on Thursday that shareholders have until the end of next week to indicate whether they plan to write checks into the new funding round. 

To backtrack to the beginning: On August 20, the Information reported that one-click checkout startup Bolt was close to raising another $450 million at a potential $14 billion valuation. That would have been shocking if wholly true, but as more info emerged about this proposed deal, the details were not that straightforward.

It would have been shocking because this company had seen a lot of controversy since its last $11 billion valuation in 2022, including its outspoken founder Ryan Breslow stepping down as CEO in early 2022. Part of the news of the new funding round included Breslow coming back as CEO. This after allegations that he misled investors and violated security laws by inflating metrics while fundraising the last time he ran the company. Breslow is also still embroiled in a legal battle with investor Activant Capital over a $30 million loan he took out.

Initial reports tagged Silverbear Capital as leading that investment, but Pamnani told TechCrunch (as also reported by Axios’ Dan Primack) that this isn’t accurate. Although Pamnani is a partner at Silverbear Capital, the investment vehicle is actually an SPV that will be managed by a new UAE-based private equity fund.

“We have already filed in UAE, and it’s pending approval of regulators,” he said, declining to reveal the names of any entities. 

Silverbear is not involved at all in the Bolt deal, Pamnani said, noting that he also works for an unnamed Cayman Islands-based private equity firm that is an LP in the SPV.

“At the beginning, I used my Silverbear email to respond to some things and that caused some confusion but Silverbear was never actually looking at this deal,” he said.

Breslow told TechCrunch he couldn’t comment on the proposed transaction.

Ashesh Shah of the London Fund also explained to TechCrunch more about that additional at least $250 million he plans to invest in Bolt, but not so much with cash. Instead, he confirmed he’s offering “marketing credits.” He described those credits as a cash equivalent that could be provided in the form of influencer marketing for Bolt by some of his funds’ limited partners, who are in the influencer and media world. 

Bolt founder Ryan Breslow
Image Credits: Bolt

New investors agree to put Breslow back in charge

Bolt’s annualized run rate was at $28 million in revenue and the company had $7 million in gross profit as of the end of March, journalist Eric Newcomer, who also saw copies of the leaked term sheet, reported this week. 

That means a valuation of $14 billion would be an enormous multiple in this market and a step up to the multiple used when Bolt landed its $11 billion valuation in January 2022.

Pamnani told TechCrunch that he was hoping for a valuation closer to $9 billion or $10 billion.

“We wanted a discounted valuation when going in and were discussing somewhere close to $9 billion to $10 billion. We have no interest in paying top dollar if we don’t have to. Unfortunately we didn’t land that,” he said. 

“But we think that is a fair valuation to be able to reach,” he said of the $14 billion valuation. 

Pamnani said the SPV also pushed for Breslow to be reinstated as CEO. Notably, the term sheet stipulates that the founder would receive a $2 million bonus for returning as CEO, plus an additional $1 million of back pay.

Bolt has been running under former director of sales Justin Grooms as interim CEO as of March when Maju Kuruvilla was out after reportedly being removed by Bolt’s board. Kuruvilla served in the role since early 2022 after Breslow stepped down.

“We realized just looking back at the historical record that Bolt had when Ryan was in the driver’s seat, and then as soon as he left, it started going downhill, and it was not the best time,” Pamnani said. 

Can Bolt really force investors to sell for a penny a share?

The deal also includes a so-called pay-to-play or cramdown provision where existing shareholders must buy additional stakes at the higher rates or the company has threatened to buy back their shares for a penny apiece.

So the question is, if a shareholder doesn’t agree to buy in again, can the company really dispose of their investment in such a way? 

Not likely, according to Andre Gharakhanian, partner at venture capital law firm Silicon Legal Strategy, who has viewed the company’s charter. He described the proposed transaction as “a twist on the pay-to-play structure.”

“Pay to play” is a phrase used in term sheets that benefits new investors at the expense of old. It grows in popularity during market downturns (which is why it has become increasingly common in 2024, according to data from Cooley). Essentially, it forces existing investors to buy all the pro rata shares they are entitled to or the company will take some punitive action, like converting their shares from preferred shares with extra rights to common shares, explains AngelList.

In Bolt’s case this is “actually not a forced conversion like most pay-to-plays. Instead, it’s a forced buyback. The goal is the same — to pressure existing investors to continue to support the company and diminish the ownership of those who are not providing that support,” Gharakhanian said. “However, instead of automatically converting non-participating investors into common — they are buying back 2/3 of the non-participating investors’ preferred stock at $0.01/share.”

The catch, he said, is that most venture-backed startups must obtain approval from preferred stockholders to do a gambit like that, according to their corporate charters. That typically requires approval from the majority, the very people that Bolt is trying to strong-arm.

What usually happens is that such a threat sends everyone to their lawyers. A deal could eventually get struck after much “hemming and hawing” and much ill will, Gharakhanian said.  

“If the company truly has no other alternatives, the non-participating investors will often relent and consent to the deal,” he said, meaning they will agree to let the company buy them back. If they agree to take that much of a loss remains to be seen.

Stay tuned.

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Clock Face Silver Nest Learning Thermostat

After nine years, Google's Nest Learning Thermostat gets an AI makeover

Clock Face Silver Nest Learning Thermostat

Image Credits: Google Nest

After nine long years, Google is finally refreshing the device that gave Nest its name. The company on Tuesday announced the launch of the Nest Learning Thermostat 4, 13 years after the release of the original and nearly a decade after the Learning Thermostat 3 and ahead of the Made by Google 2024 event next week.

Google hopes this release will usher in a new era for its smart home play. The last several years saw a marked slowdown from the company, leading many to believe the category was all but dead in the water. The Nest line’s stasis coincided with a period of relative quiet for Amazon’s Echo line.

It’s no coincidence that the new Learning Thermostat arrives as Google is amping up work on its generative AI model, Gemini. While the system appears to replace Google Assistant on Pixel and other Android devices, the branding is sticking around for the smart home line — albeit powered by many of Google’s new LLM-based models.

Gemini will effectively boost Assistant’s conversational capabilities. Generative AI is capable of powering the kinds of more natural language interactions Google and Amazon have been working for more than a decade to achieve.

Google notes in a release, “We’re thrilled to unveil how we’re using Gemini models to make our devices smarter and simpler to use than ever, starting with cameras and home automation. We’re also using Gemini models to make Google Assistant much more natural and helpful on your Nest speakers and displays.”

Image Credits: Google Nest

The fourth-generation Learning Thermostat refines the line’s familiar design with thinner and sleeker hardware. The always-on display is more customizable, launching with a choice of four faces that offer up more contextual information once someone comes closer. Each features a combination of time, temperature and air quality.

Google opted to keep touch functionality off the display, instead maintaining the familiar turning radial hardware. The screen itself is 60% larger than the gen 3’s, with an edge to edge design that finally ditches the thick black bezel.

In addition to a more conversational Assistant, new AI models are being leveraged for what Google calls “micro-adjustments,” based on the user’s habits. That’s the whole “learning” part of the product name. The refinements also utilize outside temperature to determine adjustments, all in a bid to save on energy consumption.

The $280 smart thermostat comes with an additional Temperature Sensor in-box. The pebble-like piece of hardware can be placed in any key spot in the home to give the system a better overall notion of average temperature. Additional sensors can be purchased at $40 apiece or $99 for a three-pack.

The third-gen Learning Thermostat will remain on shelves until the stock is fully depleted. The more budget-focused Thermostat E, which is currently priced at $130, is staying put.

Preorders open today for the new Nest Learning Thermostat. It hits shelves August 20.

TikTok Lite: EU closes addictive design case after TikTok commits to not bring back rewards mechanism

The TikTok logo is seen on an iPhone 11 Pro max

Image Credits: Nur Photo (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

The European Commission has closed a Digital Services Act (DSA) investigation of a rewards feature in TikTok Lite by accepting commitments from the social media giant to permanently withdraw the feature from the EU.

The TikTok Lite “task and reward” mechanism, launched in France and Spain earlier this year, lets users earn points for doing in-app activities like watching and liking videos. These points could be exchanged for Amazon vouchers. TikTok Lite is an alternative, lower-bandwidth version of TikTok’s app that the company offers in some markets.

TikTok has also agreed not to try and circumvent its commitment, such as by launching the same feature under a different name or deploying a version that serves as an equivalent alternative, according to the Commission. Although the settlement applies to the TikTok Lite reward mechanism the EU was investigating, it’s not a blanket ban on TikTok launching any rewards features in the future.

When the EU opened a probe of the rewards feature back in April, the Commission said it was worried the design of the mechanism might negatively impact the mental health of young users by “stimulating addictive behavior.”

TikTok had temporarily suspended the rewards mechanism in the EU soon after the Commission launched its investigation. The EU had threatened to use interim powers to shut down the feature while it investigated concerns that it was encouraging people to spend excessive amounts of time on the app.

Briefing journalists on background, a senior Commission official said the enforcer is happy with the outcome as it has delivered a quick result that enables EU citizens, including minors, to be protected.

The settlement does mean the EC has not formally found TikTok to be in breach of the DSA, so there’s no penalty. However, if TikTok fails to keep to its commitments, the Commission emphasized that the company could be sanctioned immediately under the DSA, which allows for fines of up to 6% of global annual turnover without the need for a fresh investigation. So TikTok has a pretty big compliance incentive here.

The Commission said it would monitor TikTok’s compliance to its commitments using existing processes and DSA powers, including with the help of Member State-level authorities that oversee compliance with the regulation’s general rules.

Commenting in a statement, Thierry Breton, the EU’s internal market commissioner, said: “The available brain time of young Europeans is not a currency for social media — and it never will be. We have obtained the permanent withdrawal of TikTok Lite Rewards programme, which could have had very addictive consequences. The DSA is in full swing.”

TikTok spokesperson Elliott Burton sent TechCrunch a statement about the settlement: “We always seek to engage constructively with the European Commission and other regulators. TikTok is pleased to have reached an amicable resolution and has now withdrawn the TikTok Lite rewards programme which was launched in France and Spain in April, which we had already voluntarily suspended.”

While this TikTok DSA case is now closed, another, more wide-ranging investigation announced back in February is still ongoing.

That case concerns the main TikTok app’s algorithm, among other areas. The Commission has said it’s worried the design of the tracking-based recommender engine may lead to “rabbit hole effects,” where users who view one video on a topic can be recommended more extreme videos that could lead to an amplification of harmful content, such as videos promoting eating disorders.

The EU is also concerned TikTok is not using robust enough age-assurance measures to protect kids from accessing inappropriate content. TikTok’s compliance with DSA transparency requirements are also being investigated.

For more on how the DSA and its sister regulation, the Digital Markets Act (DMA), are impacting Big Tech platforms, check out our earlier reporting.

DSA vs. DMA: How Europe’s twin digital regulations are hitting Big Tech

One hundred dollar bills raining from the sky between office buildings.

When a big company comes after a hot startup, it’s not a slam dunk decision to sell

One hundred dollar bills raining from the sky between office buildings.

Image Credits: REB Images / Getty Images

Rumors first surfaced last month that Google was going after cloud security startup Wiz and a $23 billion offer was on the table, the most lucrative offer ever made for a startup. Before the deal eventually died, there would have been a lot of moving parts, and it’s fair to ask: What are the mechanics when a big deal like this is set in motion, and how does a startup decide to sell or not?

We spoke to Jyoti Bansal, who is founder and CEO at Harness, a developer tools startup that has raised approximately $575 million and has made a bunch of small acquisitions along the way. While Bansal doesn’t have direct knowledge of the Google-Wiz negotiation process, he experienced being courted by a large company when Cisco came after his previous startup AppDynamics. Cisco ended up buying the company just a few days before it was set to go public in 2017 for $3.7 billion.

He says there are three factors in play when it comes to deals like this. The first is how serious the offer is and whether it’s concrete or just exploratory. For a private company like Wiz, chances are it’s going to be exploratory at first because there is not a lot of public information available on its financials as there would be with a public company.

Bansal says when he went through the AppDynamics negotiations with Cisco, he had recently filed an S-1 with the SEC and all his financial cards were already on the table. “So for an acquirer, acquiring a private company that’s on the IPO path and a few days from an IPO is essentially no different than acquiring a public company,” he said. “All the information they need is out there, and they don’t have to worry about if they’re missing some information, or the information is not clean, audited or scrutinized.”

Once you determine how serious the company is, you have to explore whether this would be a good match. “The second factor in any kind of courtship that happens is what’s the reason for the combined company? Is that interesting? Is that exciting?” You also have to take into consideration what happens to your employees and your products: Will some employees lose their jobs? Will products be deprecated or canceled?

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, you have to scrutinize the economics of the deal to see whether they make sense and whether they are a good value for shareholders. From Wiz’s perspective, it was a huge offer (assuming the rumored amount was accurate) that was 46 times its current ARR and 23 times its projected 2025 ARR. Yet Wiz thought it would be better off remaining a private company.

In Bansal’s case, when Cisco came a courtin’, he was in the middle of his company’s IPO road show. It was days before the company was going public, but even with the information out there for Cisco to analyze, there were discussions, and it wasn’t easy for Bansal to give up his baby, even if the price eventually was right.

The two companies knew that there was a strict deadline in front of them. Once the IPO happened, that would be that. The negotiations ended up involving three offers, and when it was over, Cisco got its company. “Ultimately, it comes down to what’s best for all the shareholders in terms of risk and reward. It’s all about what’s the risk of being independent versus the reward of selling,” Bansal said.

The first offer was in line with IPO value and was an easy no. The second one was better, but after discussing it with the board, Bansal said no again. “Then they came back with a third offer, and in the third offer, it made sense from a risk versus reward for our shareholders to sell the company.” And sell they did in the range 2.5 to 3 times the IPO valuation.

It’s easy to think that with billions of dollars at stake, it would be an easy decision to sell, but it really wasn’t. “It was not an easy decision from our side. It sounds like [$3.7 billion] is a very easy decision.” But he says you have to poll your investors, your fellow executives, your board members — and they all have different interests, and you are trying to come to the right decision for everyone involved.

Wiz thought it was better staying independent. For AppDynamics, with the pressure of the IPO deadline looming and a good offer on the table, the company finally went for it. “So for us to independently grow into that valuation of two and a half, three times more than our IPO valuation would have taken us at least three years of good execution to grow into it,” he said. “And there were a lot of unknowns, a lot of risk for the company like what happens in the next three years.”

But that doesn’t mean he doesn’t have some regrets in spite of making more than 300 of his employees millionaires with the transaction and personal wealth for himself. When he looks back at the timing of the announcement, he realizes that it’s entirely possible he could have made that much money and more.

“I always wonder what AppDynamics could have become if we had gone through with the IPO. There are a lot of unknowns, and hindsight is 20/20, but if you look back, we sold the company in 2017, the few years after that sale, after 2017, were some of the best boom years in the tech industry, especially for B2B SaaS,” he said. In the end, he might have made more, but instead he started Harness, and he’s happy building a second company.

It’s important to note that Wiz’s offer remains mired in rumor, so it may or may not be that much money. But if it was, the founders could also have regrets if Wiz doesn’t grow into the value it could have had if it had taken the big money money and run.

WazirX halts trading after $230 million 'force majeure' loss

sample WazirX screens

Image Credits: WazirX

WazirX, one of India’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, has “temporarily” suspended all trading activities on its platform days after losing about $230 million, nearly half of its reserves, in a security breach.

The Mumbai-based exchange said in a tweet Sunday evening that the cyberattack had substantially impaired its ability to maintain the critical 1:1 collateral ratio with assets, a move that raises more concerns about the adequacy of WazirX’s reserves and its ability to fully reimburse its customers.

WazirX suspended customer withdrawals earlier this week, after an attacker gained access to one of the exchange’s multi-signature wallets, where it stored crypto assets worth hundreds of millions of dollars. WazirX’s impacted wallet was protected by six signatories, five of whom were with the WazirX team.

“The cyberattack stemmed from a discrepancy between the data displayed on Liminal’s interface and the transaction’s actual contents,” the firm said earlier this week.

Earlier on Sunday, WazirX announced a bounty program of up to $23 million to reward anyone who could help the firm recover the stolen assets.

Risk-management platform Elliptic said earlier this week that its analysis had found that the attacker had links to North Korea.

About $230 million in missing assets is significant for WazirX, which reported holdings of about $500 million in its June proof-of-reserves disclosure. The exchange called the security breach “a force majeure event.”

Indian exchanges CoinSwitch and CoinDCX, both of which work with WazirX for some of their services, said earlier this week that their customers hadn’t been impacted by the attack on WazirX.

More bad news for Elon Musk after X user's legal challenge to shadowban prevails

X logo impaling twitter bird logo

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

It’s shaping up to be a terrible, no good, really bad news month for the company formerly known as Twitter. Elon Musk’s X has just been hit with a first clutch of grievances by the European Union for suspected breaches of the bloc’s Digital Services Act — an online governance and content moderation rulebook that features penalties of up to 6% of global annual turnover for confirmed violations.

But that’s not the only high-level decision that hasn’t gone Musk’s way lately. TechCrunch has learned that earlier this month X was found to have violated a number of provisions of the DSA and the bloc’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), a pan-EU privacy framework where fines can reach 4% of annual turnover, following legal challenges brought by an individual after X shadowbanned his account.

X has long been accused of arbitrary shadowbanning — a particular egregious charge for a platform that claims to champion free speech.

PhD student Danny Mekić took action after he discovered X had applied visibility restrictions to his account in October last year. The company applied restrictions after he had shared a news article about an area of law he was researching, related to the bloc’s proposal to scan citizens’ private messages for child sexual abuse material (CSAM). X did not notify it had shadowbanned his account — which is one of the issues the litigation focused on.

Mekić only noticed his account had been impacted with restrictions when third parties contacted him to say they could no longer see his replies or find his account in search suggestions.

After his attempts to contact X directly to rectify the issue proved fruitless, Mekić filed a series of legal claims against X in the Netherlands under the EU Small Claims process, alleging the company had infringed key elements of the DSA, including failing to provide him with a point of contact (Article 12) to deal with his complaints; and failing to provide a statement of reasons (Article 17) for the restrictions applied to his account.

Mekić is a premium subscriber to X so he also sued the company for breach of contract.

On top of all that, after realizing he had been shadowbanned Mekić sought information from X about how it had processed his personal data — relying on the GDPR to make these data access requests. The regulation gives people in the EU a right to request a copy of information held on them, so when X failed to provide the personal information requested he had grounds for his second case: filing claims for breach of the bloc’s data protection rules.

In the DSA case, in a ruling on July 5 the court found X’s Irish subsidiary (which is actually still called Twitter) to be in breach of contract and ordered it to pay compensation for the period Mekić was deprived of the service he had paid for (just $1.87 — but the principle is priceless).

The court also ordered X to provide Mekić with a point of contact so he could communicate his complaints to the company within two weeks or face a fine of €100 per day.

On the DSA Article 17 complaint, Mekić also prevailed as the court agreed X should have sent him a statement of reasons when it shadowbanned his account. Instead he had to take the company to court to learn that an automated system had restricted his account after he shared a news article.

“I’m happy about that,” Mekić told TechCrunch. “There was a huge debate in the courtroom. Twitter said the DSA is not proportional and that shadowbans of complete accounts do not fall under DSA obligations.”

As a further kicker, the court deemed X’s general terms and conditions to be in breach of the EU’s Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Directive.

In the GDPR case, which the court ruled on on July 4, Mekić chalked up another series of wins. This case concerned the aforementioned data access rights but also Article 22 (automated decision making) — which states data subjects should not be subject to decisions based solely on automated processing where they have legal or significant effect.

The court agreed that the impact of X’s shadowban on Mekić was significant, finding it affected his professional visibility and potentially his employment prospects. The court therefore ordered X to provide him with meaningful information about the automated decision-making as required by the law within one month, along with the other personal information X has so far withheld, which Mekić had requested under GDPR data access rights.

If X continues to violate these data protection rules, the company is on the hook for fines of up to €4,000 per day.

X was also ordered to pay Mekić’s costs for both cases.

While the pair of rulings only concern individual complaints, they could have wider implications for enforcement of the DSA and the GDPR against X. The former is — as we’ve seen today — only just gearing up, as X gets stung with a first step of preliminary breach findings. But privacy campaigners have spent years warning the GDPR is being under-enforced against major platforms. And the strategic role core data protections should play in driving platform accountability remains far weaker than it could and should be.

“Bringing the claims was a final attempt to clarify my unjustified shadowban and get it removed,” Mekić told TechCrunch. “And, of course, I hope Twitter’s compliance with legal transparency obligations and low-threshold contact will improve to make it even better.”

“The European Commission seems to be very busy with investigations under the DSA. So far, regarding Twitter, the Commission seems to focus mainly on stricter content moderation. My appeal to the Commission is also to be mindful of the flip side: platforms should not overreach in their non-transparent content moderation practices,” he also told us.

“If you ask me, there is a simpler solution, namely, to curb algorithms on social media such as on Twitter, which are designed to maximise engagement and revenue and to bring back the chronological timelines of the heyday of Twitter and other social media platforms as standard.”

While the EU itself has a key role in enforcing the DSA’s rules on X, as is designated as a very large online platform (VLOP), its compliance with the wider general rules falls to a European member state-level oversight body: Ireland’s media regulator, Coimisiún na Meán.

Enforcement of the EU’s flagship data protection regime on Twitter/X typically falls to another Irish body, the Data Protection Commission (DPC), which is routinely accused of dragging its feet on investigating complaints about Big Tech.

Asked for information about its enforcement of various long-standing GDPR complaints against X, a spokesperson for the DPC said it could not provide a response by the time of publication.

Individuals bringing small claims against major platforms to try to get them to abide by pan-EU law is clearly suboptimal; there’s supposed to be a whole system of regulatory supervision to ensure compliance.

“On a side note, I did experience how much time and effort it takes to litigate in court,” said Mekić. “Despite the fact that in principle it can be done without a lawyer. Even so, you spend almost a year on it while the other party can outsource it to a battery of lawyers with near-infinite budgets and just ignore it in the meantime: indeed, I have never had direct contact with anyone from Twitter, they only communicate with me through lawyers.”

Asked whether he’s hopeful the outcome of his two cases will bring an end to X’s arbitrary shadowbanning for all EU users, Mekić said he doesn’t think his own success will be enough — regulatory enforcement is going to be needed for that.

“I hope so, but I’m afraid not,” he said. “There is little focus on the commercial motives behind shadowbans. If a user breaks a rule, you could temporarily block their account. That is transparent. But that also removes that user’s ad revenue for the platform. Shadowbans are a solution for that: the user is unaware of anything and continues to engage with and generate advertising revenue for the platform.”

“It would be a brave decision by social media platforms to stop applying shadow bans and only impose transparent, contestable restrictions on users. But that will presumably lead to loss of revenue. I hope Twitter will set other platforms a good example and inform users transparently about account restrictions, as required by the DSA. To do so, platforms do need to put their commercial intentions second,” said Mekić.

“It does surprise me that the Commission has not identified anything about the large-scale shadowbanning practices that users do not receive notifications about,” he added. “It happens daily on a large scale and is easier to prove than what they are focusing on now.”

X has been contacted for a response to the rulings.

Elon Musk’s X faces first DSA probe in EU over illegal content risks, moderation, transparency and deceptive design

WazirX halts withdrawals after losing $230M worth crypto assets in security breach

sample WazirX screens

Image Credits: WazirX

WazirX, a leading Indian crypto exchange, halted withdrawals Thursday after a security breach it called a “force majeure event” resulted in the loss of $230 million, nearly half its reserves.

The Mumbai-based firm said one of its multisig wallets had suffered a security breach. A multisig wallet requires two or more private keys for authentication. WazirX said its wallet had six signatories, five of whom were with WazirX team. Liminal, which operates a wallet infrastructure firm, said in a statement to TechCrunch that its preliminary investigation had found that a wallet created outside its ecosystem had been compromised.

“The cyber attack stemmed from a discrepancy between the data displayed on Liminal’s interface and the transaction’s actual contents,” said WazirX in a statement on Thursday. “During the cyber attack, there was a mismatch between the information displayed on Liminal’s interface and what was actually signed. We suspect the payload was replaced to transfer wallet control to an attacker.”

Lookchain, a third-party blockchain explorer, reported that more than 200 cryptocurrencies, including 5.43 billion SHIB tokens, over 15,200 Ethereum tokens, 20.5 million Matic tokens, 640 billion Pepe tokens, 5.79 million USDT and 135 million Gala tokens were “stolen” from the platform.

Blockchain data suggests the attackers are trying to offload the assets using the decentralized exchange Uniswap. Risk-management platform Elliptic reported that the hackers have affiliation with North Korea.

About $230 million in missing assets is significant for WazirX, which reported holdings of about $500 million in its June proof-of-reserves disclosure.

CoinSwitch and CoinDCX, two other leading crypto exchanges in India, assured their customers that their funds were secure and unaffected by this incident.

“Our wallet security remains robust,” Sumit Gupta, co-founder and chief executive of CoinDCX, wrote in a tweet.

“We advise all our crypto investors to be mindful of potential market volatility during this time and exercise caution in their trading and investment activities,” tweeted Ashish Singhal, co-founder and chief executive of PeepalCo, the group holding firm of CoinSwitch.

This is the latest setback for WazirX, which separated from Binance in early 2023 after the two crypto exchanges had a public and high-profile fallout in 2022. Two years after Binance announced it had acquired WazirX, the two companies started a dispute over the ownership of the Indian firm. Binance founder Changpeng Zhao eventually said that the two firms hadn’t been able to conclude the deal and moved to terminate Binance’s businesses with the Indian firm.

“This is a force majeure event beyond our control, but we are leaving no stone unturned to locate and recover the funds. We have already blocked a few deposits and reached out to concerned wallets for recovery. We are in touch with the best resources to help us in this endeavor,” WazirX said in a statement posted on its X account.

The story was updated throughout the day, including most recently at 11:03 p.m. India Standard Time to include WazirX’s confirmation that it lost the crypto assets in the security breach.

WazirX halts trading after $230 million 'force majeure' loss

sample WazirX screens

Image Credits: WazirX

WazirX, one of India’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, has “temporarily” suspended all trading activities on its platform days after losing about $230 million, nearly half of its reserves, in a security breach.

The Mumbai-based exchange said in a tweet Sunday evening that the cyberattack had substantially impaired its ability to maintain the critical 1:1 collateral ratio with assets, a move that raises more concerns about the adequacy of WazirX’s reserves and its ability to fully reimburse its customers.

WazirX suspended customer withdrawals earlier this week, after an attacker gained access to one of the exchange’s multi-signature wallets, where it stored crypto assets worth hundreds of millions of dollars. WazirX’s impacted wallet was protected by six signatories, five of whom were with the WazirX team.

“The cyberattack stemmed from a discrepancy between the data displayed on Liminal’s interface and the transaction’s actual contents,” the firm said earlier this week.

Earlier on Sunday, WazirX announced a bounty program of up to $23 million to reward anyone who could help the firm recover the stolen assets.

Risk-management platform Elliptic said earlier this week that its analysis had found that the attacker had links to North Korea.

About $230 million in missing assets is significant for WazirX, which reported holdings of about $500 million in its June proof-of-reserves disclosure. The exchange called the security breach “a force majeure event.”

Indian exchanges CoinSwitch and CoinDCX, both of which work with WazirX for some of their services, said earlier this week that their customers hadn’t been impacted by the attack on WazirX.

interior (dash) of Waymo robotaxi

Waymo issues second recall after robotaxi hit telephone pole

interior (dash) of Waymo robotaxi

Image Credits: Andrej Sokolow/picture alliance / Getty Images

Waymo has voluntarily issued a software recall to all 672 of its Jaguar I-Pace robotaxis after one of them collided with a telephone pole. This is Waymo’s second recall. The Alphabet-owned company recalled previous software in February after two of its robotaxis crashed into the same pickup truck that was being towed by a tow truck.

The Verge first published the news after Waymo alerted the publication to its recall remedy — a sign that the robotaxi company’s taking a proactive approach amid increased scrutiny from regulators and the general public. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is currently investigating Waymo’s autonomous vehicle software after receiving 31 reports of robotaxis crashing or potentially violating traffic safety laws. 

NHTSA confirmed to TechCrunch that it has received Waymo’s recall documents and is processing them for publication on its website.

“This is our second voluntary recall,” Katherine Barna, a Waymo spokesperson, told TechCrunch. “This reflects how seriously we take our responsibility to safely deploy our technology and to transparently communicate with the public.”

Transparency is top of mind for most autonomous vehicle companies following the disarray at GM’s Cruise in October and November 2023. While Cruise is slowly making its way back into markets, the company lost its permits to operate in California and grounded its entire fleet last year after one of its robotaxis ran over and dragged a pedestrian for 20 feet. The company’s reputation took a hit less so for the nature of the incident — a human-driven vehicle hit the pedestrian first, throwing them into the path of the Cruise robotaxi — and more because Cruise executives withheld key details of the incident from regulators. 

The accident that prompted Waymo’s second recall happened on May 21 when a Waymo vehicle in Phoenix, driving without a human safety operator, collided with a telephone pole in an alley during a low-speed pullover maneuver.  

Local reports say the Waymo was driving to pick up a passenger through an alley lined on both sides by wooden telephone poles that were level with the road and surrounded by yellow lines to define a path for vehicles. The Waymo vehicle slowed down to pull over and struck a pole at a speed of eight miles per hour. Video of the crashed vehicle shows that it appears to have driven right into the pole. Waymo’s robotaxi sustained some damage, but there were no passengers or pedestrians injured. 

“We went to work immediately and determined that, in certain situations, our vehicles had an insufficient ability to avoid collisions with on-road narrow, permanent objects within the drivable surface,” said Barna. “We have since implemented mapping and software updates.”

The passenger told 12News that the Waymo — which would have been her first ride — never made it to pick her up.

interior (dash) of Waymo robotaxi

Waymo issues second recall after robotaxi hit telephone pole

interior (dash) of Waymo robotaxi

Image Credits: Andrej Sokolow/picture alliance / Getty Images

Waymo has voluntarily issued a software recall to all 672 of its Jaguar I-Pace robotaxis after one of them collided with a telephone pole. This is Waymo’s second recall. The Alphabet-owned company recalled previous software in February after two of its robotaxis crashed into the same pickup truck that was being towed by a tow truck.

The Verge first published the news after Waymo alerted the publication to its recall remedy — a sign that the robotaxi company’s taking a proactive approach amid increased scrutiny from regulators and the general public. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is currently investigating Waymo’s autonomous vehicle software after receiving 31 reports of robotaxis crashing or potentially violating traffic safety laws. 

NHTSA confirmed to TechCrunch that it has received Waymo’s recall documents and is processing them for publication on its website.

“This is our second voluntary recall,” Katherine Barna, a Waymo spokesperson, told TechCrunch. “This reflects how seriously we take our responsibility to safely deploy our technology and to transparently communicate with the public.”

Transparency is top of mind for most autonomous vehicle companies following the disarray at GM’s Cruise in October and November 2023. While Cruise is slowly making its way back into markets, the company lost its permits to operate in California and grounded its entire fleet last year after one of its robotaxis ran over and dragged a pedestrian for 20 feet. The company’s reputation took a hit less so for the nature of the incident — a human-driven vehicle hit the pedestrian first, throwing them into the path of the Cruise robotaxi — and more because Cruise executives withheld key details of the incident from regulators. 

The accident that prompted Waymo’s second recall happened on May 21 when a Waymo vehicle in Phoenix, driving without a human safety operator, collided with a telephone pole in an alley during a low-speed pullover maneuver.  

Local reports say the Waymo was driving to pick up a passenger through an alley lined on both sides by wooden telephone poles that were level with the road and surrounded by yellow lines to define a path for vehicles. The Waymo vehicle slowed down to pull over and struck a pole at a speed of eight miles per hour. Video of the crashed vehicle shows that it appears to have driven right into the pole. Waymo’s robotaxi sustained some damage, but there were no passengers or pedestrians injured. 

“We went to work immediately and determined that, in certain situations, our vehicles had an insufficient ability to avoid collisions with on-road narrow, permanent objects within the drivable surface,” said Barna. “We have since implemented mapping and software updates.”

The passenger told 12News that the Waymo — which would have been her first ride — never made it to pick her up.