A Drift Protocol insider who lost her savings in the exploited decentralised finance protocol has said the industry needs to grow up if it’s ever going to be ready for everyday investors.
On April 1, hackers drained over $286 million from the Solana-based trading platform. Investigators have since pointed the finger at North Korean cybercriminals.
The incident highlights how decentralised finance still has a long way to go when it comes to its security, which will prevent it from being accepted among traditional finance, according to Ann Irvina Ravinther, former marketing lead at Drift Labs, the firm behind the trading platform.
“Trust needs to recover,” Ravinther told DL News.
“People already in crypto and DeFi are forgiving and think it’s part of progress but at some point the industry needs to mature if it’s going to be ready for retail.”
“Right now, it’s not,” she added.
Ravinther left Drift Labs in February, according to her LinkedIn profile.
Ravinther wrote on X following the hack that she had lost $76,000 in crypto because of the hack. It isn’t clear whether she has managed to recover the funds. She didn’t answer DL News’ questions on the matter.
Security in the DeFi space is a major issue after a number of high-profile hacks last year. Most recently, in November, criminals stole $128 million from decentralised exchange and automated market maker Balancer.
In 2025, criminals stole over $2.5 billion in crypto, according to DefiLlama. So far in 2026, digital larcenists have stolen nearly $456 million.
The DeFi space is still experimental but has become more mainstream as of late, with even a US President Donald Trump-backed protocol, World Liberty Financial, promising to revolutionise the way people handle their money.
Still, security needs to improve if people are to trust DeFi, said Ravinther.
“In the five years that I’ve been in crypto, it is sad that security is still the story,” she wrote on X.
“How is this the future of finance?”
She added in an exchange with DL News: “It’s one of those things you think won’t happen, and then it does.”
David Schwed, a cybersecurity expert chief operating officer of Near protocol infrastructure firm SVRN, told DL News that DeFi protocols aren’t focusing enough on security.
