A well-known Korean exchange recently announced that due to security risks detected on the Flow mainnet, it has suspended deposits and withdrawals of FLOW starting from December 27. The specific recovery time will be announced separately. More notably, the Korea Digital Asset Exchange Association subsequently issued a "Trading Risk Warning" for Flow. What does this mean? It indicates that stricter measures may be on the way—such as restricting trading pairs, flagging risky assets, or even terminating trading support. Such incidents are not uncommon in the crypto world, but each time they remind us: mainnet security issues directly impact the risk control decisions of exchanges. Whether Flow can quickly identify problems and fix vulnerabilities will determine the pace of subsequent recovery. Market sentiment is often most sensitive at such moments.
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TokenomicsTrapper
· 7h ago
lmao flow mainnet vulnerability right on schedule... called this months ago when everyone was still shilling the dapps. now watch the classic delisting domino effect unfold, exchanges gonna get paranoid and nuke it from every listing within weeks. textbook greater fool theory playing out in real time ngl
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ProbablyNothing
· 12-29 22:08
Flow has done it again, and this time it really looks quite serious.
The mainnet has already been found to have security vulnerabilities, and the Korean exchange's coordinated warning is truly impactful. Don't be fooled by the current "risk warning"; it will likely face delisting and trading pair restrictions later on.
Honestly, issues with the mainnet test the team's response speed the most. If they fix it quickly, there's a chance to salvage it; if they take too long, it's basically game over.
Whether Flow can make a comeback this time really depends on how fast they can fix it. The market can't wait too long.
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MevHunter
· 12-29 15:23
Flow has done it again, with mainnet issues directly causing the project to fall into exchange risk control lists. It probably means it's over for now.
This time, it's not just about suspending deposits and withdrawals; Korea has joined forces to issue a risk warning, and deleting trading pairs is likely the next step.
Mainnet security is neither a big nor a small issue, but in the crypto world, it's a fatal flaw.
Let's see how quickly the Flow team responds. If they can't fix it fast, they'll be kicked out of the exchange ecosystem.
Another project pushed out due to technical problems—why bother?
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 12-27 17:58
If Flow doesn't fix this quickly, I'm afraid it will be collectively delisted by Korean exchanges.
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FlashLoanLord
· 12-27 17:57
Flow has crashed again, and this time it looks really serious...
The mainnet had a bug that directly caused transactions to be lost, and it probably will take a hit afterwards.
It's another "notice to be announced later," who knows when it will actually move.
Korean exchanges are teaming up to implement risk alerts, oh man, this could be a cold start for half a year.
Slow fixes mean delisting, Flow's operations team needs to work overtime.
This kind of thing happens every time; security issues immediately turn exchanges into risk control experts.
It seems Flow has taken a big hit this time; fixing vulnerabilities is easy, rebuilding confidence is hard.
That's how the crypto world is—no one can say who’s safe; today you crash, tomorrow it’s someone else.
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StableBoi
· 12-27 17:57
Flow is causing trouble again. A mainnet crash is really serious, and the Korean exchange consortium has issued an alert directly. There will definitely be more aggressive moves later.
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This time, it depends on the Flow team’s response speed. If they can't fix the vulnerability quickly, they’ll have to wait to be delisted.
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The biggest annoyance with mainnet issues is that when one exchange suspends trading, others immediately follow suit, and market sentiment collapses in seconds.
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Can Flow turn things around this time? After the risk warning, it seems unlikely that any exchange will dare to take over.
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That's the only annoyance in the crypto world: when the mainnet has issues, exchange risk controls are stricter than anything else, and investors can only passively accept it.
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It looks like we have to wait for an official statement from Flow. Whatever they say now is useless; actions speak louder than words.
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MEVHunterZhang
· 12-27 17:36
Flow really hit a snag this time. The mainnet had issues, and exchanges directly drew red lines for you. It might be a while before things pick up again.
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JustHodlIt
· 12-27 17:35
Flow is back at it again? The mainnet vulnerabilities are so frequent, I really can't hold on anymore.
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Korean exchanges are teaming up to put pressure on, this time Flow probably needs to seriously rectify.
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It's another security issue... When will the crypto world settle down? There's a new problem every day.
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With this risk warning routine, there will definitely be more aggressive moves later. Flow holders should be worried.
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When the mainnet has issues, blaming the exchange? They need to strengthen their infrastructure.
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This fix can't be completed quickly this time; market sentiment has already risen. Just wait for the decline.
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If the Flow team doesn't step up now, they'll really be delisted. Korea isn't joking around.
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Basically, it's just not professional enough. Major projects should have this level of awareness.
A well-known Korean exchange recently announced that due to security risks detected on the Flow mainnet, it has suspended deposits and withdrawals of FLOW starting from December 27. The specific recovery time will be announced separately. More notably, the Korea Digital Asset Exchange Association subsequently issued a "Trading Risk Warning" for Flow. What does this mean? It indicates that stricter measures may be on the way—such as restricting trading pairs, flagging risky assets, or even terminating trading support. Such incidents are not uncommon in the crypto world, but each time they remind us: mainnet security issues directly impact the risk control decisions of exchanges. Whether Flow can quickly identify problems and fix vulnerabilities will determine the pace of subsequent recovery. Market sentiment is often most sensitive at such moments.