The Eye of Horus: Spotting and Analyzing Attacks on Ethereum Smart Contracts
This addresses the need for automated detection and investigation of smart contract attacks in blockchain security, which is crucial for protecting financial assets, though it is incremental as it builds on existing vulnerability detection tools.
The authors tackled the problem of detecting and analyzing attacks on Ethereum smart contracts by developing Horus, a framework that identified 1,888 attacked contracts and 8,095 adversarial transactions in a large-scale analysis up to May 2020, showing that attack numbers did not necessarily decrease over time.
In recent years, Ethereum gained tremendously in popularity, growing from a daily transaction average of 10K in January 2016 to an average of 500K in January 2020. Similarly, smart contracts began to carry more value, making them appealing targets for attackers. As a result, they started to become victims of attacks, costing millions of dollars. In response to these attacks, both academia and industry proposed a plethora of tools to scan smart contracts for vulnerabilities before deploying them on the blockchain. However, most of these tools solely focus on detecting vulnerabilities and not attacks, let alone quantifying or tracing the number of stolen assets. In this paper, we present Horus, a framework that empowers the automated detection and investigation of smart contract attacks based on logic-driven and graph-driven analysis of transactions. Horus provides quick means to quantify and trace the flow of stolen assets across the Ethereum blockchain. We perform a large-scale analysis of all the smart contracts deployed on Ethereum until May 2020. We identified 1,888 attacked smart contracts and 8,095 adversarial transactions in the wild. Our investigation shows that the number of attacks did not necessarily decrease over the past few years, but for some vulnerabilities remained constant. Finally, we also demonstrate the practicality of our framework via an in-depth analysis on the recent Uniswap and Lendf.me attacks.