downshift - μ/acc pfp
downshift - μ/acc
@downshift.eth
how does an attacker spoof an ENS like this?
13 replies
2 recasts
9 reactions

Adam pfp
Adam
@
I dont think they can..and if so then this would be bad. But I never said his drop was bad. His was a good one, it just was stolen from me. I think you misunderstood me.
2 replies
0 recast
1 reaction

Alex pfp
Alex
@asenderling.eth
This is almost definitely a spoofed transaction. Anyone can initiate a transaction that looks to be coming from a source that it isn't. It's exploiting UI/UX on explorers and software wallets to make it look like it's coming from a legitimate source.
1 reply
0 recast
2 reactions

Adam pfp
Adam
@
How do you fake a ENS?
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

Alex pfp
Alex
@asenderling.eth
The ENS is not being faked. The scammers are routing a scam token to you through Vitalik's ENS using a specific airdrop function to make it look like it's coming from him. Look at this tx I received back in September. It's a scam token that appears to be coming from a Coinbase hot wallet when you look at it in Basescan, but in reality it's originating from a scammer's address (0x718e00241C0384A76d8926E1D6BbCE4421491646). It's a UI/UX flaw being exploited by scammers. https://basescan.org/tx/0xfd0f41adc21620f766f5acc9fcb4816c38e32e39871c5d76ab4686e6df1d2248
1 reply
0 recast
3 reactions

Adam pfp
Adam
@
Well this is all great and everything, honestly makes me feel worse…but anyways…I NEVER Interacted with this wallet. We already identified two users here who have been doing this to me for months. You guys are very intelligent but obviously you are giving me the runaround and I know it when I see it. Thanks for everything guys. It was a great effort and ya got me.
1 reply
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0 reaction