Having an audit done by a competent firm is a must have for any smart contract, and with the expertise of QuillAudits it will be done flawlessly. The audit process for Tezos smart contract is based on the comprehensive approach we follow to investigate the code for security flaws and potential vulnerabilities, and the best possible ways to mitigate them.
Comprehensive Security Assessment
Our security auditors analyze your smart contracts for watertight fulfilment of their business logic and identify ambiguities or inadequacies that cyberattacks might exploit.
Get your code scanned for flaws that can impede the smooth functioning of your application and frustrate your users.
Bug Fixes
Deploy Auto Scans
Supplement the security audit with regular automatic scans to stay on top of the security of your smart contract.
Get a detailed report with the manual code assessment results, automatic scans, and actionable points for each detected vulnerability and deficiency.
Complete Audit Report
QuillAudits Smart Contracts Audit will identify entry points in your smart contract's code for potential hackers and provide remedies for plugging them.
Our Smart Contracts will weed out all errors and deficiencies that hamper the smooth functioning of your Tezos application, thereby preventing downtime.
Our report will include recommendations for enhancing the code's efficiency and saving operational costs.
Once you have fixed your smart contracts' vulnerabilities and optimized their efficiency, you will be able to roll out a Tezos app that works like a well-oiled machine, leading to better customer satisfaction and higher revenues.
Each year, millions drain down the crypto hacks. Here are a few examples how hackers took advantage of the loopholes in the code to escape with millions:
In March 2022, $615M were stolen from Ronin Network, a platform powering the popular mobile game Axie Infinity.
In August 2021, the criminals transferred $611M-worth of Poly Network tokens to three wallets they controlled.
In September 2020, $275m worth of cryptocurrency was stolen from the Singapore-headquartered exchange KuCoin.
Caption: Values calculated according to cryptocurrency prices at the time of the theft
Source: Statista/Bloomberg, Business Insider, TechCrunch, CNBC, Ronin Network, Vice.
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