Hacker steals $438K in crypto, NFTs after compromising Beeple’s Twitter account

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The Twitter account of famous digital artist Mike Winkelmann, commonly known as Beeple, was hacked on May 22.

Harry Denley, a security analyst at Metamask, announced this via Twitter.

In his tweet, Denley warned users that Beepleโ€™s tweets, which contained a link to a raffle of a Louis Vuitton NFT partnership, were part of a phishing attack. Denley added that clicking the link would drain crypto from usersโ€™ wallets.

The scammer orchestrated this attack looking to capitalize on Beepleโ€™s recent collaboration with the fashion giant. This collaboration saw Beeple design 30 NFTs for Louis Vuittonโ€™s Louis The Game mobile game. The game integrated the NFTs as rewards for players.

The scammer continued posting phishing links from Beepleโ€™s account. The links led to fake Beeple collections, which attracted unwitting users. Specifically, the collections promised a free mint for unique NFTs.ย 

Denley added:

If we assume everything is secure, at time of this tweet the bad actors managed to scam:

Scam #1

36ETH (~$72k)

0xf305 is yet to withdraw

Scam #2

62.35ETH (~$125k)

37.59WETH (~$75k)

45 NFTs (est ~$166k)

Total = $438k (active for ~5hours)

The scammer used a crypto mixer to launder the proceeds

On-chain data revealed that the scammer sold the obtained NFTs on OpenSea. To launder the proceeds, the scammer sent the funds to a crypto mixer.

Beeple eventually regained control over his account. However, he urged users to always be careful, adding that anything that seems too good to be true is a scam.

This news comes as phishing attacks continue plaguing the crypto and NFT industries. MetaMask warned web3 enthusiasts using Apple devices to be wary of a phishing attack in the past month. This warning came after an Apple user lost more than $650,000 worth of NFTs and ApeCoin (APE).

Per MetaMask, Apple devices have a default security issue that allows malicious actors to see the seed phrase stored on Appleโ€™s iCloud storage service.


Credit: Source link

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