Key Takeaways:
Trust Wallet and Binance founder Changpeng Zhao have confirmed a security breach that led to millions in user losses. While the incident has raised concerns across the crypto community, the company moved quickly to contain the issue and compensate affected users.
Read More: Trust Wallet Extension Bug Triggers $6M+ Crypto Losses, Forces Emergency Upgrade to Version 2.69
Trust Wallet disclosed that it identified a security incident limited exclusively to Browser Extension version 2.68. According to the company, no other browser versions and no mobile wallets were impacted.
The wallet provider urged users running version 2.68 to immediately disable the extension and upgrade to version 2.69 via the official Chrome Web Store. Trust Wallet stressed that users should avoid opening the affected extension before updating, as doing so could further expose wallet data.
The team said it is actively investigating how attackers managed to submit and distribute a compromised version of the extension. Updates will continue as more details emerge.
Binance founder Changpeng Zhao addressed the incident publicly, confirming the scale of losses and the company’s response.
“So far, $7m has been affected by this hack. Trust Wallet will cover. User funds are SAFU,” CZ wrote on X. He added that the investigation is ongoing, particularly around how malicious code made its way into a published extension version.
The assurance helped calm fears among users, especially given Trust Wallet’s scale as one of the world’s most widely used self-custodial wallets. The commitment to reimburse losses reflects Binance-linked platforms’ long-standing SAFU narrative, even when incidents originate outside core exchange infrastructure.
Read More: CZ Wins Peter Schiff in Viral Bitcoin Debate After One-Minute Takedown Shocks Crypto Community
Although Trust Wallet has not published all technical information, preliminary evaluations indicate that there is a supply-chain-style tradeoff related to the extension update process.
Browser extensions are particularly vulnerable to crypto threats:
It seems that in this scenario, attackers have used that trust model against them. According to reports of blockchain investigators, the money has been emptied soon after users relayed transactions via the hacked extension. Trust Wallet highlighted that users that opened or interacted with version 2.68 were the only ones who were exposed. The patched version 2.69 removes the vulnerability.
The incident contributes to an increasing conversation on the subject of browser extensions as a security vulnerability in Web3. Whereas non-custodial wallets enable the user to exercise control over the asset, the responsibility and risk are transferred to software interfaces which need to balance usability and security.
Recent trends show:
Security researchers are still encouraging users to:
The post $7M Lost in Trust Wallet Browser Hack, CZ Confirms Full Compensation as Extension Flaw Exposed appeared first on CryptoNinjas.

