Web3 security platforms Immunefi and Dedaub are working together to enhance the capabilities of Immunefi’s newly launched Security Operations Command Center Magnus.
Together, Immunefi and Dedaub protect more than $220 billion in assets, while DeDaub offers security and auditing tools from industry leaders such as Ethereum Foundation, Coinbase, Eigenlayer and ChainLink.
The company announced that their collaboration is seeing Magnus’ on-chain firewall, allowing real-time threat detection for users.
Magnus is a recently introduced Web3-centric Secops command center designed to provide a single interface for security auditing, prize money, network monitoring and firewalls. Meanwhile, Dedaub’s Onchain Firewall technology, powered by new artificial intelligence models, offers a solution that can be used to block the most malicious threats before the protocol affects the platform.
“Together we’ll build a firewall for Web3. It’s designed to proactively block exploits before compromise on vulnerable contracts. This firewall is a practical step to make protocol defenses more automated and reliable,” said Dedaub co-founder.
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Through the partnership, DeDaub’s proven threat prevention technology will be integrated into Magnus. This includes over 200 security audits across the Defi and EVM compatible ecosystem, as well as static analytics, real-time monitoring, and smart contract decompilation tools. Firewall integration also provides actionable alerts and automation tools.
Like Dedaub, Immunefi recently announced the Plume Network as a customer of Magnus Founding. The real asset blockchain platform tapped Immunefi for end-to-end security to expand the RWAS footprint.
Immunefi reported in April that Crypto Hack’s losses for the first four months of 2025 had already exceeded $1.74 billion, more than $400 million, surpassing the $420 million lost in the same period in 2024.
The $1.74 billion figure now means that Crypto Hack’s losses in 2025 were already outpacing the $1.49 billion looted the previous year. Bibit’s $1.5 billion hacking account explains most of this.
Part of Immunefi’s support efforts have seen security researchers pay more than $115 million. Meanwhile, the platform claims that its technology helped to avoid potential hack losses of over $25 billion.
You might like it too: Crypto hacks in the first quarter rise to 131% year-on-year as losses reached $16.3 billion, according to data
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