The Mango Markets “hacker,” who goes by Avraham Eisenberg, bragged on Twitter about his newest undertaking, Mango Inu, a meme coin based mostly on Eisenberg’s notorious Mango Markets exploit. Eisenberg, nevertheless, made it clear on Twitter a few days after launching the undertaking that anybody who invested would “positively lose all of your cash.”
Eisenberg later added that he made $100,000 for thirty minutes of labor via Mango Inu however may have made way more. As a result of means he eliminated liquidity from the liquidity swimming pools, he misplaced cash to bots front-running him. Eisenberg estimated he would have made $250,000 had he used one other methodology, resembling Flashbots.
(sadly the bots frontran the liq pull and I forgot to make use of flashbots so I solely made like 100k as an alternative of 250k for a half hour of labor)
— Avraham Eisenberg (@avi_eisen) October 23, 2022
Eisenberg provided no solace to those that invested cash within the meme coin. Certainly, in response to questions over the legality of his actions, Eisenberg argued that his actions had been wholly authorized. Eisenberg had the identical argument for exploiting Mango Markets which he seen as a complicated buying and selling technique.
The dearth of promoting or info on Mango Inu ought to qualify the rug pull as “simply open market liquidity transactions,” in line with Eisenberg.
What half? Mango Inu is unquestionably not a safety (no advertising, and so forth), no guarantees had been made, simply open market liquidity transactions
— Avraham Eisenberg (@avi_eisen) October 23, 2022
A Reddit thread was created to debate the bragging nature of Eisenberg’s tweets. Basic sentiment throughout the Reddit neighborhood was that the rug pull was “scumbag habits,” and Eisenberg is more likely to earn “a goal on his again” for publicly claiming his exploits.
One Twitter person, Mihai, argued that Eisenberg did promote Mango Inu via his Twitter account and that a number of tweets invalidate his declare that he “did completely no promotion.” Eisenberg denied that any of his claims had been fraudulent in a later rebuttal stating Mango Inu was “analogous to promoting a field clearly labelled empty field .”
You admit to Mango Inu being a rugpull. Do you fake that your “did completely no promotion” clears you of guilt? Do you assume all of the individuals who purchased it had been anticipating to “lose all of your cash”, as per your disclaimer? pic.twitter.com/RQNSDTSRSx
— Mihai² (@mihai673) October 23, 2022
Mocking Mihai, Eisenberg replied by sharing a meme laughing at crypto traders dropping cash with meme cash.
— Avraham Eisenberg (@avi_eisen) October 23, 2022
Eisenberg seems to have carried out a number of exploits over the previous few years. In January, he posted a substack article entitled “How our staff makes hundreds of thousands in crypto risk-free.” The weblog takes declare to a number of NFT bot-sniping campaigns and an AAVE mortgage exploit utilizing the rebasing token AMPL.
The put up concluded with a name for others to share ‘alpha’ and concepts for related campaigns in crypto or elsewhere, stating
“Now we have the abilities to execute and the capital to maximise. It doesn’t essentially have to be in crypto.”