Scan to download
BTC $75,017.16 +0.26%
ETH $2,346.94 -0.62%
BNB $635.44 +2.15%
XRP $1.44 +3.59%
SOL $88.78 +4.54%
TRX $0.3270 -0.03%
DOGE $0.0985 +4.04%
ADA $0.2582 +5.26%
BCH $457.62 +3.88%
LINK $9.52 +2.88%
HYPE $44.20 -0.83%
AAVE $115.21 +8.89%
SUI $1.00 +4.35%
XLM $0.1681 +6.36%
ZEC $341.50 -1.76%
BTC $75,017.16 +0.26%
ETH $2,346.94 -0.62%
BNB $635.44 +2.15%
XRP $1.44 +3.59%
SOL $88.78 +4.54%
TRX $0.3270 -0.03%
DOGE $0.0985 +4.04%
ADA $0.2582 +5.26%
BCH $457.62 +3.88%
LINK $9.52 +2.88%
HYPE $44.20 -0.83%
AAVE $115.21 +8.89%
SUI $1.00 +4.35%
XLM $0.1681 +6.36%
ZEC $341.50 -1.76%

Innora exposes two major vulnerabilities in Saturn: user funds may be locked or even permanently frozen, and privileged addresses can legally take away 1/3 of the funds

2026-04-14 18:14:02
Collection

The security agency Innora released a report stating that the financial protocol Saturn on Ethereum has two serious vulnerabilities. These include:

Withdrawal freeze vulnerability: Under normal business operations, all user funds could be locked, with a minimum of 30 days and, in extreme cases, indefinitely frozen. No hacker is needed; the protocol can trigger this itself.

Privileged addresses in the protocol can legally intercept up to 33.33% of the funds per operation. According to current data, a single operation can intercept up to approximately $157,000, with a theoretical total risk of up to $4.26 million.

Innora stated that over 90% of Saturn's assets are managed by privileged addresses, and users are completely reliant on trust. As of the report's release, this vulnerability has not yet been fixed.

app_icon
ChainCatcher Building the Web3 world with innovations.