OpenSea has experienced a phishing scam. Such an attack hooked over 640 ETH in assets from 32 users with the label Fake_Phishing5169.
TL;DR
The OpenSea phishing attack has a lesson learned to us. Should we still want a company to provide free service for us or should we find another alternative who can really provide free service in Web3 vision?
Phishing Attack
It appears that Wyvern contract is a loophole for attackers to enter previously saved transfer calldata and token addresses to steal creators’ NFTs without actually signing from their own wallet.
OpenSea Migration
No to mention that OpenSea is in the process of migrating their listings from the old contract to a new contract Wyvern 2.3 to prevent a different type of exploit.
Not Connected to Website
The CEO insisted that their website has no flaw but others disagreed to point out the flaw in their code.
OpenSea NFT Marketplace
Many people may think OpenSea is a decentralized NFT marketplace. It is more than just an NFT marketplace. OpenSea was planning to IPO recently and they compared themselves to Web2 companies like Lyft. They even recruited Lyft to become their first CFO to prepare an IPO. Such moves bring the company backward into Web2 rather than Web3 company. The recent phishing attack makes it worse. People wonder if it is still a place to list their NFTs or possible to find another place to list new NFTs.
In Conclusion
The OpenSea phishing attack is a warning to investors and crypto enthusiasts. If the company cannot admit their error, how can they provide service to their customers as Web3 company should do?
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Photo by Marek Piwnicki on Unsplash
Disclosure: The article was written by a delusional author who is possibly a nut job without any questions whatsoever about expertise in the subject matters. You should not believe any words this author wrote or you may experience similar symptoms or even possibly become a nut job.
Resource
https://etherscan.io/address/0x3e0defb880cd8e163bad68abe66437f99a7a8a74#tokentxnsErc721
https://forkast.news/headlines/opensea-ceo-phishing-nft-marketplace/
https://www.engadget.com/opensea-phishing-attack-190402620.html
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