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A Contentious Ukraine Bet Leads to Clash Between Polymarket, UMA Communities

BornTooLate.Eth has accumulated over 1.3 million UMA tokens to attack a Ukraine-themed market — but nobody has appeared to have made much money.

Photo of a hand painted in blue and yellow.
(Elena Mozhvilo/Unsplash)

What to know:

  • An Ethereum wallet user, 'BornTooLate.Eth', has manipulated the outcome of a Ukraine-themed contract on UMA, a decision-making oracle used by Polymarket, by becoming one of the largest holders of UMA tokens.
  • Despite the significant influence, the attack did not result in substantial profits or losses, with the largest winner and loser from the contract gaining and losing around $55,000 and $73,000 respectively.
  • Polymarket has stated that no refunds will be issued as this is not considered a 'market failure', and is working with the UMA oracle team to prevent similar incidents in the future.

An entity operating from an Ethereum wallet 'BornTooLate.Eth' has engaged in a governance attack on UMA, a decision-making oracle used by Polymarket, to influence the outcome of a Ukraine-themed contract by becoming one of the largest holders of UMA tokens.

UMA is a decentralized "optimistic" oracle protocol that resolves disputes in prediction markets by allowing UMA token holders to vote on contentious outcomes. It has faced its share of controversy for resolving disputed markets, such as Barron Trump's involvement in a Presidential meme coin, the nature of 'finding' the OceanGate submarine, and Venezuela's contested election, drawing criticism due to subjective decisions that frustrated certain market participants.

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On-chain data shows that BornTooLate.eth has approximately 1.3 million UMA tokens, making them a top-5 governance staker and giving them significant sway over the resolution of UMA disputes.

(Dune)
(Dune)

In the case of this Ukraine-themed market that was attacked, the contract asked bettors to speculate on the possibility of a deal being signed involving U.S. access to the country's rate earth resources by the end of March.

(Polymarket)
(Polymarket)

A deal is in the works, reports say, but nothing has been signed. And yet on Polymarket, it resolved to 'yes' after BornTooLate.Eth used his staked UMA tokens to vote 'yes' on the resolution.

UMA supporters say this isn't a governance attack and the oracle service worked as intended, though Polymarket users are unhappy because BornTooLate.eth voted for a factually incorrect outcome

Read more: Polymarket, UMA Communities Lock Horns After $7M Ukraine Bet Resolves

A Very Unprofitable Trading Strategy

Curiously, this attack doesn't seem to have netted a large payday for any of the participants.

Market data from on-chain curator Polymarket Analytics shows that the largest winner from the contract took home just over $55,000.

(Polymarket Analytics)
(Polymarket Analytics)

Likewise, the losses were quite moderate compared to other closely-watched Polymarket contracts with the biggest loser forfeiting around $73,000.

An etherscan page for BornTooLate.Eth shows that the actor began accumulating UMA tokens over a year ago. Given their holdings of over 1.3 million tokens, building that sort of treasury for the attack would have cost over $2 million.

For its part, Polymarket says no refunds will be issued because this isn't a "market failure" and said in a statement on Discord it is working with the UMA oracle team to prevent it from happening again.

"This market resolved against the expectations of our users and our clarification," a spokesperson posted on Discord. "We’re committed to building the future of prediction markets, which requires building resilient systems in which everyone can trust."

Polymarket founder Shayne Coplan didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

CORRECTION (March 26, 11:12 UTC): Corrects spelling of "rogue" in headline.

CORRECTION (March 27, 12:05 UTC): Correct headlines and adds story link.

Sam Reynolds

Sam Reynolds is a senior reporter based in Asia. Sam was part of the CoinDesk team that won the 2023 Gerald Loeb award in the breaking news category for coverage of FTX's collapse. Prior to CoinDesk, he was a reporter with Blockworks and a semiconductor analyst with IDC.

Sam Reynolds