Jesse Powell, chief executive of the U.S.-based cryptocurrency exchange Kraken, has lashed out at the decentralized finance (DeFi) sector in the aftermath of Monday’s $24 million arbitrage exploit of Harvest Finance.
In a tweet on Tuesday, Powell said he would “not accept” DeFi projects’ attempts at “externalizing the cost” of “hasty reckless” rollouts.
“Stop f**king up your bullshit DeFi scams and expecting exchanges to bail you out,” Powell said. “Invest in audits, insurance and please [do your own research].”
The comments come after several DeFi projects have suffered some form of an exploit or major management failure, while some have opened to investors with faulty or negligible audits of their code.
At the end of September, gaming protocol Eminence Finance suffered an exploit that saw $15 million-worth of DAI drained while still in testing.
Still, the incident highlighted the danger of placing trust, and money, in projects run by unknown individuals.
Despite all this, the DeFi sector is still drawing investors seeking yield, reaching a new milestone of $12.45 billion in total value locked up in smart contracts on Oct. 25.
That figure dropped by about $1.15 billion after Monday’s exploit of Harvest, and now stands at $11.3 billion, according to DeFi Pulse.
It’s not clear why Powell suggested exchanges are having to “bail out” DeFi failures. CoinDesk reached out to clarify but did not receive a reply by press time.