UXLINK Completes Smart Contract Audit Ahead of Token Migration - Security Milestone Achieved
UXLINK clears critical security hurdle just before major token migration.
Smart Contract Vetting Complete
The protocol's core infrastructure passed rigorous security testing - no vulnerabilities detected. This audit represents the final checkpoint before UXLINK initiates its token migration process.
Migration Timeline Accelerates
With the audit successfully completed, UXLINK can now proceed with its planned token migration without security concerns delaying the transition. The team maintains its original migration schedule despite the intensive audit process.
Industry Implications
This development signals UXLINK's commitment to security-first deployment - a refreshing approach in an ecosystem where 'move fast and break things' often means breaking investor portfolios. Because nothing says 'trust us' like paying third-party auditors to confirm you didn't build a digital honeypot.
What the audit fixes and how the migration will work
The audited contract sets a fixed supply and drops on-chain minting to prevent repeat exploits. UXLINK said cross-chain interoperability will rely on partner services rather than a native mint function.
The migration plan is meant to realign supply with the project’s whitepaper and to restore confidence after the compromise. Centralized exchanges have been briefed and most have pledged support or temporary suspensions while the swap is coordinated.
More on UXLINK exploit
On Sept. 22 attackers used a “delegateCall” vulnerability to seize admin rights over UXLINK’s multi-signature wallet. That allowed transfers of roughly $11.3 million in assets, including stablecoins, ETH, and WBTC, and enabled the attacker to mint between 1 and 2 billion UXLINK tokens on Arbitrum.
About 490 million of those tokens were dumped on decentralized exchanges, bridged to Ethereum, and swapped for roughly 6,732 ETH, according to chain analysis. The minting and sell-off pushed UXLINK down more than 70%, from about $0.30 to roughly $0.09.
Security firms and exchanges moved quickly. PeckShield joined the probe, and major CEXs including Upbit froze suspect deposits, limiting further laundering. Law enforcement has been notified and recovery procedures are active.
UXLINK attacker falls victim to phishing scam
In an unexpected twist, the attacker was later phished. ScamSniffer and on-chain investigators flagged a subsequent approval-based drain that moved roughly 542 million UXLINK to phishing wallets tied to the Inferno Drainer network. One large transfer totaled 433,583,532 UXLINK.
That siphon reduced the exploiter’s usable holdings, though the attacker still realized substantial proceeds.
UXLINK says frozen addresses are under recovery procedures and that community losses will be handled with transparency and compensation. The audited contract and migration are the next steps in that effort. The team urged users to follow only official channels for migration instructions.