Security

Crypto wallet founder loses $125,000 to fake LFG token phishing attack

The co-founder and CEO of Nest, a security-focused crypto wallet app, fell victim to a phishing attack while trying to claim what he thought was a real airdrop, draining 52 stETH tokens worth $125,000.

The LFG token airdrop, which stands for “less fees and gas,” was revealed yesterday to reward Ethereum users who have spent more than $4,269 on transaction fees since 2016, aiming to onboard them to the Solana blockchain.

One fake website, mimicking the official LFG token, popped up to steal users’ funds, taking Lou as one of its high-profile victims.

“I just got scammed out of $125k of stEth while trying to claim the LFG airdrop,” Nest Wallet co-founder Bill Lou posted on X today.

Lou clicked on a link from an article at the top of a Google search that led to a scam website. “I saw an article guide to the airdrop and followed the link to sign a message. I didn’t even question it,” Lou explained. He said he was using MetaMask instead of Nest to claim as he had a “test version installed and was fixing some bugs.” If he had used his own product, the wallet would have caught it, Lou added.

Fake links and X accounts

Lou is seemingly not the only one affected by such an attack, with other victims reporting their wallets were drained after clicking on similar fake links via fake X accounts.

Acknowledging the issue, the project behind LFG posted, “We are aware of several scam accounts impersonating us and are reporting them. Please do the same and help protect your fellow users,” clarifying its official X account and website details.

A total of 400 billion LFG will be airdropped to the 387,000 wallets that qualify, according to the project, with unclaimed tokens burned in one month’s time. The token is currently valued at $0.000069, according to CoinGecko data.

Some 25,000 users have so far claimed LFG tokens on Solana. Of the total supply of 1 trillion LFG tokens, 60% are set aside for airdrops, with 10% allocated to early contributors, 6% for liquidity provision and 24% for its treasury, according to another X post.

Source

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