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تمت سرقة 1.28 مليون دولار من العملات المشفرة في هجوم تصيد مرتبط بمهاجم من عملية احتيال حديثة بقيمة 32 مليون دولار

source-logo  cryptopolitan.com 14 أكتوبر 2024 10:36, UTC

تفقد الضحية رموز PEPE وAPU وMSTR

أفاد PeckShieldAlert أن العنوان 0xb0b8…40c7 تم استنزافه من العديد من العملات المشفرة بعد أن وقع الضحية على توقيع تصريح التصيد الاحتيالي الضار.

تشمل الأصول المسروقة 108 مليار رمز PEPE، و73.8 مليون رمز APU، و165000 رمز MSTR.

#PeckShieldAlert تم استنزاف العنوان 0xb0b8…40c7 من العملات المشفرة بقيمة 1.28 مليون دولار تقريبًا، بما في ذلك 108 مليار $PEPE و73.8 مليون $APU و165 ألف $MSTR ، بعد التوقيع على #توقيع تصريح التصيد الاحتيالي .
يرتبط عنوان #التصيد #Fake_Phishing442846 بالمحتالين الذين استنزفوا ما قيمته 32 مليون دولار… pic.twitter.com/fq3a4DD0tD

– PeckShieldAlert (PeckShieldAlert) 14 أكتوبر 2024

The phishing address, identified as #Fake_Phishing442846, has been linked to the same group of scammers responsible for a recent $32 million theft of Spark Wrapped Ethereum tokens (spWETH).

A September attack resulted in the loss of $32 million

The earlier attack occurred on September 27 and targeted a wallet ending in ‘e57.’ The attack resulted in the loss of 12,083 spWETH tokens.

Security firm CertiK provided details on the subsequent movement of these funds, with large portions being transferred to multiple wallets.

Notably, blockchain intelligence firm Arkham Intelligence has suggested that the compromised wallet in the $32 million attack may belong to F2Pool founder Shixing Mao, although this information remains unconfirmed.

According to the data from Spectrum Search, the crypto industry witnessed an alarming rise in cryptophishing scams. Data shows that over $46 million in crypto was lost in September.

Over 10,805 victims were affected due to these attacks in September, which brought the overall losses in the third quarter to $126 million. Spectrum Search shared that over 11,000 victims per month were affected during this period.

In several instances, many victims fall prey to the phishing links that are shared by fake accounts on X or Google ads. Once a user clicks on these links, the chances for the user to lose their data, crypto or wallet access escalate following the subsequent actions done.

cryptopolitan.com