Agree on this. I'd also add the moral argument that sandwiching is theft. So:
* If "code is law" morally, then the sandwichers are playing a fair game and the hackers are too.
* If "code is not law", then the sandwichers themselves are the thieves, and the hackers are heroes.
The idea that the hackers alone are the ones committing evil seems like a needle thread precisely to exonerate wealthy financial exploiters while throwing the legal hammer at those who dare challenge them. I'm glad it's being challenged.
🚨TenArmor Security Alert🚨
Our system has detected that #FPC on #BSC was attacked, resulting in an approximately loss of $4.7M.
It appears that the token employs a flawed burn mechanism, which burns tokens from the pool when a user sells. The attacker simply used a flash loan to buy tokens from the pool, pushing the price extremely high, and then sold the tokens back to the pool—effectively sandwiching the burn to make a huge profit.
Attack transaction: https://t.co/fgGTgzgJvL
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