Update: As time of writing, Blur has fixed the issue and enabled the "bid accept" feature.
April 22 (Cointime) - NFT marketplace Blur.io announced that it has disabled the "bid accept" feature, in response to a recent bug in its message processing that impacted some bids canceled in the last 80 hours.
The issue affected 36 bids over a 30-minute period, prompting the platform to disable bid accept functionality and fix the bug. As a result, any current bids above the floor will be automatically canceled before bid accepts are re-enabled. To prevent future issues, two additional redundant safety checks have been implemented.
In response to the affected traders, Blur has promised to refund two times the difference between their bid price and the proper top bid at the time, without needing to sell their NFTs.
Update: At around 8pm PT today, we detected a bug in our message processing that affected some bids that were cancelled in the last 80 hours. Once we detected the error, we disabled bid accept functionality. 36 affected bids were accepted during a 30 minute period. We’ve since…
— Pacman | Blur.io (@PacmanBlur) April 22, 2023
Earlier today, NFT whale collector Dingaling has reminded users who have ETH in the Blur bid pool to withdraw their assets because Blur has currently encountered a bug where "historical bids are still automatically executed," causing many historical Azuki NFT bids to be effective. Dingaling reveals that one address has triggered 9 bids of 15.52 ETH when the floor price of the Azuki NFT series was 15 ETH.
Lots of people with old Azuki bids getting rekt. This address just ate 9 Azukis for 15.52E each when the floor is 15.00E pic.twitter.com/wjJuQF5eyx
— dingaling (@dingalingts) April 22, 2023
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