Ethereum’s Constantinople Upgrade Faces Delay Due to Security Vulnerability

- Advertisement -

Ethereum’s long-anticipated Constantinople upgrade has just been delayed after a critical vulnerability was discovered in one of the planned changes.

Smart contract audit firm ChainSecurity flagged Tuesday that Ethereum Improvement Proposal (EIP) 1283, if implemented, could provide attackers a loophole in the code to steal user funds. Speaking on a call, ethereum developers, as well as developers of clients and other projects running the network, agreed to delay the hard fork – at least temporarily – while they assessed the issue.

Participants included ethereum creator Vitalik Buterin, developers Hudson Jameson, Nick Johnson and Evan Van Ness, and Parity release manager Afri Schoedon, among others.

Discussing the vulnerability online, the project’s core developers reached the conclusion that it would take too long to fix the bug prior to the hard fork, which was expected to execute at around 04:00 UTC on Jan. 17.

- Advertisement -

Called a reentrancy attack, the vulnerability essentially allows an attacker to “reenter” the same function multiple times without updating the user about the state of affairs, an attacker could essentially be “withdrawing funds forever,” said Joanes Espanol, CTO of blockchain analytics firm Amberdata in a previous interview with CoinDesk.

He explained:

“Imagine that my contract has a function which makes a call to another contract… If I’m a hacker and I’m able to trigger function a while the previous function was still executing, I might be able to withdraw funds.”

This is similar to one of the vulnerabilities found in the now-infamous DAO attack of 2016.

ChainSecurity’s post explained that prior to Constantinople, storage operations on the network would cost 5,000 gas, exceeding the 2,300 gas usually sent when calling a contract using “transfer” or “send” functions.

However, if the upgrade was implemented, “dirty” storage operations would cost 200 gas. An “attacker contract can use the 2300 gas stipend to manipulate the vulnerable contract’s variable successfully.”

A new execution time has not yet been planned.

Ethereum image via Shutterstock

Previous Articles:

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Tokenized RWAs surge 66% in 2026 to $23.6B

The on-chain market capitalization for tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) surged roughly 66% in 2026...

NASA Satellite’s Early Reentry Exposes Wall Street Risk

NASA's Van Allen Probe A spacecraft re-entered Earth's atmosphere in March 2026, eight years...

Lawmakers introduce DEATH BETS Act to ban war, death betting

Lawmakers Mike Levin and Adam Schiff introduced the DEATH BETS Act on Tuesday, explicitly...

Nansen Launches Real-Time Intelligence for Citrea, Advancing Transparency into Bitcoin’s First ZK Rollup

Singapore – – Nansen today announced the launch of its chain growth integration...

Australia: Crypto Not a Unique Asset Class, Says Top Regulator

Australia's financial regulator advocates regulating crypto based on economic function, not as a separate...

Must Read

Top 10 Best DeFi Tokens to Invest in 2022

Decentralized Finance (Defi), is one of the most talked-about topics in the crypto space alongside NFTs. So if you want to know the best...