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Scammers Pretend To Be Azuki Creators, Scams Community of NFTs -Breaking

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Scammers pretend to be Azuki creators. Scams Community for NFTs
  • Unaware users can be tricked into falling for a NFT scam by fraudsters.
  • Verified Twitter account (NYSE: ) is hacked and redesigned. Then, it’s used for malicious links, which can lead to victims losing their NFTs.
  • The Azuki fraud uses the exact same methodology as the ApeCoin scam.

Scammers have found a new way to steal NFTs from unsuspecting users – this time, it’s from Azuki NFT owners. This involves hacking into verified Twitter accounts to steal NFTs, altering the public details so that it appears an Azuki co-creator owns them, then dropping malicious hyperlinks.

Two hacked journalist accounts chronicled that the hack started with a phishing email that was claimed to be sent by Twitter’s support team. One journalist’s account was also hacked. He sent over 6 000 tweets, tagging possible victims. In addition, India’s University Grants Commission (UGC) was hacked following the same modus operandi (MO).

After hackers gained control of these accounts, they started to create misleading tweets. They promised NFT airdrops and included a link. The scam prompts unknowing users to create a new wallet. Once a connection is made, hackers steal the NFTs from their victims’ respective wallets.

In response to the prevalent scams, a Twitter representative confirmed that the company is “aware of and actively working on a solution to combat” the attacks.

This Azuki scam uses the same MOs as the ApeCoin(APE) scam of the previous month. Hackers allegedly stole $1 million in NFTs via the Twitter scam in March. Like the Azuki fraud, the ApeCoin scheme involved hijacking of verified Twitter accounts to create misleading links that would allow airdrops.

The victims didn’t receive any airdrops, but they did lose NFTs.

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