Solana DeFi platform Drift investigates suspicious activity, tells users to halt deposits
The platform halted deposits while it investigates suspicious activity and urges users to proceed with caution.
By Helene Braun|Edited by Nikhilesh De Apr 1, 2026, 6:35 p.m. Make preferred on
What to know:
- Drift, a Solana-based DeFi platform, said it is investigating "unusual activity" on its protocol and urged users not to deposit funds while the review is underway.
- The alert sparked speculation across the crypto community, with some users reporting irregular behavior in their positions on the platform.
- Helius CEO Mert Mumtaz said it appears Drift "might be getting exploited," raising concerns that any confirmed breach could endanger user funds and weigh on Solana’s resurgent DeFi ecosystem.
Solana-based decentralized finance (DeFi) platform Drift said it is investigating “unusual activity” on its protocol, prompting concerns that the platform may have been exploited.
“We are observing unusual activity on the protocol. We are currently investigating. Please do not deposit funds into the protocol while we investigate,” Drift wrote in a post on X. “This is not an April Fools joke. Proceed with caution until further notice. We’ll provide additional updates from this account.”
The warning triggered speculation across the crypto community, with some users reporting irregular behavior tied to their positions.
Helius CEO Mert Mumtaz added to the concern in a separate X post, writing, “not 100% fully certain yet, but it seems drift might be getting exploited.” Helius is a key infrastructure provider on Solana, offering APIs and node services that developers and platforms rely on to access blockchain data.
If confirmed, an exploit could affect user funds and add pressure on Solana’s DeFi ecosystem, which has seen renewed growth in recent months.
Solana NewsDeFiBreaking NewsMore For You
Encryption Supremacy: Zcash and Privacy in the Age of Scale
By CoinDesk ResearchMar 31, 2026
Commissioned byGenZcash
Most crypto privacy models weaken as blockchain data grows. Encryption-based models like Zcash strengthen. CoinDesk Research maps the five privacy approaches and examines the widening gap.
Why it matters:
As blockchain adoption scales, the metadata available to machine learning models scales with it. Obfuscation-based privacy approaches are structurally degrading as a result. This report provides a comprehensive comparison of all five major crypto privacy architectures and a framework for evaluating which models remain durable as AI capabilities improve.
View Full ReportMore For You
Galaxy Digital's testnet suffers hack but no client funds or information were compromised
By Will Canny, AI Boost|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf51 minutes ago
Mike Novogratz’s crypto financial services firm said unauthorized access was limited to a segregated R&D workspace; trading systems and client accounts were unaffected.
What to know:
- Unauthorized access was limited to an isolated R&D workspace, not production systems.
- Galaxy says no client funds or account data were accessed or at risk.
- All trading platforms and services remain fully functional and unaffected, the firm said.

Galaxy Digital's testnet suffers hack but no client funds or information were compromised
51 minutes ago
Crypto Long & Short: Governance is the real Layer 1
2 hours ago
The Protocol: Quantum computing could break Bitcoin sooner, says Google
2 hours ago
Jamie Dimon signals JPMorgan entry into prediction markets as competition surges
2 hours ago
Cango raises capital as it faces NYSE delisting risk with shares below $1
2 hours ago
Franklin Templeton launches crypto division with 250 Digital acquisition
4 hours agoTop Stories
Bitcoin’s crashes are shrinking, and Wall Street is starting to notice
5 hours ago
Bitcoin ETFs post first monthly inflows since October as price stabilizes
8 hours ago
Some quantum-resistant tokens jump 50% as Google flags risks to Bitcoin security
12 hours ago
Hong Kong hasn’t issued a single HKD stablecoin license after March target
15 hours ago
Charles Hoskinson not a fan of CLARITY Act, warns of 'weaponization' by future lawmakers
Mar 31, 2026