Security

JPEG’d warns of phishing attack months after Curve hack

NFT protocol JPEG’d alerted community members to malicious actors targeting holders of its token as phishing scammers continue to target crypto and DeFi operators.

The P2P non-fungible token (NFT) lending platform JPEG’d posted a notice on X following numerous complaints from users citing phishing campaigns and a booby trap revocation tool. These services are typically employed by web3 users to clear out access previously given to decentralized applications.

Bad actors launched a number of malicious platforms mimicking genuine services per the update from JPEG’d. The goal is to secure transaction approval before draining NFTs and digital assets in the wallet.

It has come to our attention that scammers are targeting $JPEG holders claiming false approvals on phishing contracts and linking to a malicious revocation tool. The current name they go under is “Trojansec”.

Please do not interact with them or any contract that you are unsure…

— JPEG’d (@JPEGd_69) October 30, 2023

You might also like: Crypto whale losses over $24m in phishing scam

Several phishing efforts have been directed toward cryptocurrency participants and decentralized finance users. As crypto.news reported, hard wallet maker Trezor became the target of a new phishing campaign. Social media accounts tied to rapper Nelly were also compromised.

Viral SocialFi app Friend.Tech reported suffered Google search manipulation attacks and investors lost $4.5 million in USDT to a phishing scam.

JPEG’d’s call for vigilance comes months after hackers attacked on-chain stable swap exchange Curve Finance, stealing nearly $100 million from multiple protocols and liquidity providers. Some of the funds were recovered by white hat hackers and a collaborative DeFi helpline tagged SEAL 911 was formed.

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