Cardano founding entity EMURGO steps down from Pentad governance role after wallet exploit

Quick Take
- EMURGO said stepping aside reflects the accountability it owes as a Cardano founding entity.
- The exploit drained roughly $2.4 million in ADA from 374 wallets through a flaw in the wallet’s software.
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EMURGO, one of Cardano's three founding organizations and the developer of the SecondFi wallet, said on Wednesday that it is stepping down from its role in the blockchain's Pentad governance group to focus its attention on recovering user funds following last month's $2.4 million exploit.
"Our immediate priority is the SecondFi recovery process, and we are concentrating our resources where they are needed most," the company said in a post on X. "We believe this is the right decision for our users and for the ecosystem, and it reflects the standard of accountability we hold ourselves to as a founding entity of Cardano."
Pentad, a coalition that was officially formed earlier this year, includes Input Output Global, the Cardano Foundation, Intersect, the Midnight Foundation, and EMURGO. A January development report introducing the group says it will act as a "coordinated, treasury-supported process focused on network-wide infrastructure needs."
The announcement comes roughly two weeks after EMURGO disclosed an exploit affecting SecondFi, the Yoroi-rebranded self-custody wallet that the group launched earlier this year. The exploit, which leveraged a flaw in the wallet's address generation system, drained roughly 16 million ADA worth about $2.4 million at the time, from 374 wallets.
In the days following the exploit, EMURGO said it had worked out a recovery plan and expects to reimburse lost user funds over the course of two weeks.
The decision to step away from Pentad was met with criticism in the replies about EMURGO's handling of the exploit and its governance role. Some users also questioned whether EMURGO should retain any treasury funding associated with Pentad, though The Block was unable to confirm whether it directly received funds from the group's 70 million (ADA) Critical Integrations Budget that was approved in January.
EMURGO did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether it received funding through the program or if its withdrawal from Pentad is permanent.
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