OpenSea CEO Clarifies Phishing Attack Did Not Originate on Platform

NFT

OpenSea co-founder and CEO Devin Finzer clarified that the recent phishing attack that saw $1.7 million stolen did not originate from the platform. The team is investigating the matter to locate the source of the attack.

NFT Marketplace OpenSea Co-Founder and CEO Devin Finzer provided an update on the recent phishing attack. In a Twitter thread on February 20, Finzer Talk about recent reports of the attack originated from OpenSea and clarified that it did not in fact start on OpenSea.

Finzer was very clear about the circumstances surrounding the attack, in which some users lost a total of $1.7 million from the popular NFT platform. The CEO pointed to several methods that were not vectors for attack, including interaction with an OpenSea email; minting, buying, and selling on the platform causing the listing migration tool; and clicking on the site’s banner.

That said, Finzer revealed that the platform was working with victims of the theft to narrow down the source of the attack that may have been responsible for the malicious signatures. The team’s investigation continues and provided some updates on his Twitter page.

OpenSea said that there were 17 individuals who were affected and that the attacker is no longer active. The malicious contract has not seen any activity in the past 15 hours. OpenSea and its executives have urged users not to click links outside of OpenSea.io.

OpenSea is going through a bad patch

The OpenSea platform has been hit by a series of negative incidents over the past few months. It remains the most popular NFT platform, despite these incidents. A recent UI bug led to over $1.1 million worth of NFTs being purchased at rock bottom prices.

But the platform has also had some security issues. Perhaps the most serious of them all was the theft of $1.3 million worth of NFTs due to a bug. Bored Ape NFTs have also been stolen, which led to the marketplace freezing transactions, which subsequently drew a lot of criticism from the crypto community.

Security has become a top priority for the NFT subsector following these incidents. The attacks have multiplied due to the influx of capital which has seized the public consciousness.

admin

Read Previous

No Bitcoin Bull Run Until End of 2024: Huobi Co-Founder

Read Next

Ethereum Whale Buys 47 Billion Shiba Inu Tokens While Holding $116 Million Worth of SHIB

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Right Menu Icon