After a temporary halt following an attack that exposed the bridge’s vulnerabilities, the BONE Bridge has reopened. The relaunch includes strengthened security features to prevent future breaches. Core developer Kaal Dhairya revealed the rebuilt bridge incorporates enhanced withdrawal controls, new blacklisting tools for addresses, and a mandatory seven-day delay before withdrawals are executed for added security monitoring. Blockchain firm Hexens conducted an independent audit of the updated code before its release on the mainnet. The incident prompted a suspension of all cross-chain activity while Shibarium rebuilt its systems to strengthen their infrastructure. Some stolen assets remain blocked, including KNINE tokens linked to the exploit, with the team only offering a conditional bounty for full recovery. However, they have ruled out partial returns at this time. Currently, only BONE transfers are active with other tokens set to follow once testing concludes. Developers are currently finalizing a repayment plan for affected users, which will be communicated as soon as the network fully recovers. This cautious restart prioritizes trust and transparency over speed in rebuilding user confidence. Shibarium is returning to its core principles after learning from this incident, focusing on security and reliability to regain trust from users.