OMNIA Protocol Helped Secure the Privacy of 21M Users

Given Metamask's gigantic userbase alone, the vulnerability could have had a major impact.

OMNIA Protocol Helped Secure the Privacy of 21M Users

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Alexandru Lupascu, who founded OMNIA, helped push Metamask toward patching a vulnerability in its wallet.

Vulnerability Fixed

Metamask has finally solved a vulnerability in its wallet after a report from Alexandru Lupascu, founder of the privacy-centric OMNIA Protocol, made headlines in January.

The vulnerability allowed bad actors to extract IP addresses whenever non-fungible tokens (NFTs) were airdropped to wallets. The issue was first reported to the company by Lupascu in mid-December and Metamask’s founder, Dan Finlay, was quick to acknowledge the issue. Fortunately, and although it took roughly two months, Metamask has recently resolved the issue, releasing an updated patch on Github (“NFT Auto Detection Settings”) to restore the privacy of its users.

OMNIA Protocol, and Alexandru in particular, were instrumental in keeping the whole blockchain healthy and safe. Had it not been for OMNIA’s co-founder being vocal about the severity of the vulnerability, would the issue have lingered and possibly resulted in the loss of privacy?

Because Metamask is the number one web 3.0 wallet with over 21 million users, it would have been disastrous for the whole crypto industry if hackers managed to exploit such a vulnerability. The public pressure exerted over social media definitely played a factor in Metamask hastening its efforts to resolve the exploit and save its users’ privacy. And this is just one example of how committed the OMNIA team is towards the security, privacy, and decentralization of the blockchain ecosystem.

OMNIA is a decentralized protocol that allows an easy, safe, and decentralized access to multiple blockchain applications. It was built by a team with extensive academic background and expertise in cyber security and crypto.

Access to decentralized applications (dApps) is becoming increasingly concentrated, as it is often hosted by a singular node provider. This issue may lead to the creation of single points of failure and potential exploitation of user data, problems blockchain technology originally aimed to solve.

Through OMNIA it is possible to access blockchains in a truly decentralized fashion thanks to its infrastructure of nodes and privacy relayers. OMNIA creates financial incentives for node operators, thus ensuring they are rewarded for keeping the network functioning, and establishing privacy as a priority. Network latency is reduced, infrastructure costs are lowered, and users can rest easy knowing their identities and blockchain records should be untraceable.

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