You can save readers a few steps by just posting the Medium article:
https://medium.com/@cipherblade/how-not-to-react-when-your-cryptocurrency-is-stolen-92f7c72616afIt spends too much time talking about the behavior of the victim, which isn't necessarily relevant, though the article does provide some blockchain forensics to show that the coins may have been taken through malware. How do we know the malware doesn't exploit the bug identified by Al Maawali and patched immediately after by Coinomi? Were there apparent hackings conducted
after the bug was fixed? The article doesn't mention this.
While it sounds like malware was likely involved, there could still have been an oversight error on the part of Coinomi.
Not surprised. It read like a load of shit to me. As if there's someone in the bowels of google rubbing their hands as they wait for the seeds to roll in. Gimme a bleedin' break.
I agree that the chances of Google being in on it are slim to nonexistent.
Actually it does: "Most crucially, however, the first two incoming transactions into the Consolidation Wallet happened in October 2018, well before the Coinomi desktop app was even released (which was December 31 2018).". In plain English, the hackers group that stole the OP's coins and the very wallet that they have used to consolidate funds has been active months before the 1st version of Coinomi Desktop was ever released. This alone is a proof that the OP has been lying all along about the circumstances under which his wallet was emptied.