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This Article is From May 05, 2022

Bored Ape Thefts on Instagram Are Crypto's Latest Hack Headaches

Bored Ape Thefts on Instagram Are Crypto's Latest Hack Headaches
The cyber threat combines with crypto-based crime hitting an all-time high last year.

When it comes to crypto hacks, the story is often the same: Scammers take advantage of a vulnerability in a blockchain's design and make off with millions, like in the $600 million-plus heist involving the play-to-earn NFT game Axie Infinity and the $77 million theft that took place Saturday on decentralized finance projects Rari Capital and Fei Protocol.

But a $3 million hack last week involving nonfungible tokens from the popular Bored Ape Yacht Club universe exploited a different kind of weakness that isn't unique to blockchain. 

Scammers infiltrated the NFT collection's official Instagram account and posted a link to a fake website where users connected their crypto wallets for what they thought was an NFT launch. In reality, they had unwittingly opened themselves up to theft. When the actual launch happened on Saturday, users were again targeted when scammers posted links to fake websites that ended up cleaning users out of NFTs worth a collective $6.2 million.

The incidents exemplify a growing trend in which social media is being used as a tool for amplifying and executing crypto and NFT scams. These thefts aren't just hitting Instagram: Twitter, Facebook, and the chat platforms Discord and Telegram are also fertile ground for these maneuvers, according to Ronghui Gu, chief executive officer of blockchain security firm CertiK.

“We have seen more and more attacks and hacks in web3 and the blockchain industry and many of them have new forms of attack, which we haven't seen before,” Gu said in an interview.

The escalating social-media cyber threat combines with crypto-based crime hitting an all-time high last year, according to blockchain security firm Chainalysis' 2022 Crypto Crime Report. Illicit crypto wallets worldwide received $14 billion, an 80% increase from 2020. That's a cost crypto firms and tech giants can't afford to ignore, and it ratchets up the pressure on them to shore up security and tighten safeguards.

Crypto Copycats

Spam bots and account impersonation are already well-known problems on Twitter. About $2 million was stolen from customers over a seven-month period in 2020 and 2021 through crypto scams advertised by fake Elon Musk accounts, according to the Federal Trade Commission. These tactics are also rife on Crypto Twitter and other platforms upon which crypto users depend. 

“They heavily rely on this social media to get information about all kinds of different crypto projects like NFTs,” Gu said, adding that he's even seen fake Telegram accounts that claim to belong to his company, CertiK.

Malicious accounts posing as real crypto companies, projects and entrepreneurs often tout fake giveaways of cryptocurrencies or NFTs. They can also disseminate through spam bots, which are automated social media accounts that can make posts and tag users, just like profiles run by humans. Twitter maintains that less than 5% of profiles are fake or spam, according its first-quarter earnings report -- but that doesn't make them any less of a potential threat. 

When Musk announced last week that he was acquiring Twitter Inc. in a $44 billion deal, he said he wanted to improve the social media platform by “enhancing the product with new features, making the algorithms open source to increase trust, defeating the spam bots, and authenticating all humans.” 

Identity Theft

It doesn't have to be a false account disseminating crypto fraud -- real accounts belonging to companies can be compromised too. The official BAYC Instagram account used two-factor authentication, according to a statement from Yuga Labs, the developer of the NFT collection. But that didn't keep the account from being hacked.

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