Flow scraps rollback plan after $3.9M exploit amid community backlash

The Flow blockchain ecosystem has scrapped its initially proposed full rollback plan in response to a $3.9 million exploit, opting instead for a targeted remediation strategy after facing intense pushback from developers, bridge operators, and legal experts who warned the rollback would do more harm than good. 

In a Monday post on X, Alex Smirnov, founder of bridge provider deBridge, confirmed there would be “no rollback” and no reorganization of the blockchain under the updated recovery plan. 

Flow also released a technical implementation plan, noting that accounts impacted by the exploit have been temporarily restricted and Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) operations are currently read-only as part of phase one.

“There will be no chain reorganization,” said Flow. “All legitimate transactions that occurred prior to the halt remain valid and will not require resubmission or reconciliation.”

The implementation plan initially faced pushback from many users due to concerns about the network’s decentralization and security. According to Smirnov, the plan, which included a rollback of the Flow chain, was a “rushed decision” that could trigger “financial damage far beyond the impact of the original exploit.

FLOW plummets as exploit shakes market confidence

The exploit was carried out on December 27, when an adversary exploited a flaw in Flow’s execution layer and siphoned approximately $3.9 million in assets from the network via multiple cross-chain bridges, before the validators launched measures to stop the incident. 

The breach, however, did affect their trust and confidence in the security and governance of the network, the Foundation and its forensic partner, FindLabs, said, adding that existing user balances were not accessed. Sentiment in the markets shifted instantly in response to the incident. 

The network’s native token, FLOW, slumped as the exploit and proposed recovery plan turned headlines. The price of the token plummeted by over 50% on a single day, briefly dipping to new lows of around $0.079 on platforms like Binance, before stabilizing to some extent later, according to market data. 

The token has underperformed wider market gains, even as other assets, like Bitcoin and Ethereum, clawed back ground. At a time when Bitcoin climbed above $90,000, and Ethereum rebounded past $3,000, respectively, FLOW continued to lag, highlighting the persistent fear of investors.

Flow opts for phased restart after controversial rollback proposal

Initially, the Foundation considered rolling back the blockchain to a checkpoint before the exploit, a controversial move that would have erased transactions submitted during a specific timeframe and required users to resubmit their activity. That rollback idea sparked fierce backlash from validators, bridge operators, developers, and other ecosystem participants. 

Implementation of the remediation plan could take several days, according to the timeline provided by Flow. Following Phase One, the blockchain is expected to relaunch its non-EVM chain, Cadence, and resume operations between the bridge and exchange.

“[Flow’s] response required genuine collaboration between parties under high stress,” said Find Labs, the team behind Flow block explorer Flowscan, in a Monday X post. “It takes serious stewardship to be responsive to ecosystem feedback, yet be ready to make the hard choices at the right time.”

Analysts say that while the incident underscores challenges facing Layer‑1 networks in managing breaches without compromising decentralization, the revised plan may help restore confidence by preserving valid transactions and avoiding disruptive chain reorganizations.

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Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/flow-scraps-rollback-plan/