Solana-based Wallet user emptied in a presumed exploit
Solana-based Wallet user emptied in a presumed exploit

- user of the Phantom Wallet complain that funds are deducted without their consent
- Several commentators indicate an exploit in connection with the Wallet or NFT marketplace Magic Eden
User of the Solana-based digital wallet Phantom claim that millions were stolen from an exploit that is connected to the wallet or Magic Eden, an NFT marketplace that is on the native token of the network.
users stated that they received notifications that they send tokens to an unknown group of addresses. The total amount of the funds withdrawn so far is suspected of a total of more than $ 6 million in Sol. Blockworks was unable to immediately check this number independently.
some use either with @Phantom or @magicede emptied 6 million in about 10 minutes, which literally compromised any phantom letter pocket, not sure whether there are other item pockets pic.twitter.com/dvtksomeye
- paladin (@nftpeasant) 2. August 2022
The exact amount that has been stolen from the users' wall pockets is not yet known. Representatives of Phantom and Magic Eden did not immediately respond to inquiries about comments.
A user who passed on Twitter to @Paladin said Blockworks said that several people familiar with the situation had “randomly emptied” their wallets.
"You have lost thousands and most of your money, so you are quite depressed," you said. "Move coins to a major and separate every trustworthy website."
paladin pointed out two Wallet addresses The suspect that together a credit of about 37.777 Sol (1.5 million US dollars). A
The Exploit seems to have an impact on all Solana-based tokens, with recommendations for moving coins to a general book, for revoking trustworthy apps such as Magic Eden or for locking by staking. hacks and exploits related to Defi and NFTS continue to increase. Last month, Blockworks reported Hacks of more than $ 1.2 billion for the first quarter of this year alone, which seems to be an increase in frequency for the aspiring sector. continuous hacks "are basically an insoluble problem," said Mitchell Amador, CEO of Immunefi, in an interview with block works. "We knew that it would go in this direction. The volatility is part of crypto, the flowing money would increase." . . The contribution Solana-based Wallet Users Drained in Suspected Exploit is not a financial advice.