- USDT(TRC-20)
- $1,545.9
The X account of Michael Saylorâs Bitcoin development firm MicroStrategy was recently breached, with the hackers broadcasting a series of phishing links to a fake airdrop for a so-called Ethereum-based âMSTRâ token. According to independent on-chain sleuth ZachXBT, losses incurred from the hack have already totaled over $440,000.
Fake âMSTRâ Airdrop Costs Users $440K
MicroStrategy, the worldâs largest Bitcoin (BTC) corporate holder, has found itself at the center of a cybersecurity incident. The companyâs official X account was compromised on Monday to promote a fraudulent airdrop.
The bad actors published an unauthorized post announcing the airdrop of âMSTRâ token and a link for claiming the fake token on a copycat MicroStrategy webpage. The attackers claimed MSTR was Ethereum-based, had low transaction fees, and was backed by MicroStrategyâs Bitcoin reserves. Once unsuspecting users accept a couple of permissions in their Web3 wallet, it is believed that the hackers can automatically drain the tokens from their wallets.
there was a second best after all
(hacked acc if not obvious lol) pic.twitter.com/cdLqbqiiCO
â Spreek (@spreekaway) February 26, 2024
Reports show the phishing attempt has already led to $440,000 being lost, based on analysis by blockchain sleuth ZachXBT. Web3 anti-scam platform Scam Sniffer noted that one victim had lost over $424,000 to the scam only a few minutes after the first malicious link was posted on MicroStrategyâs X account. The crypto assets lost include $134,000 from Wrapped Balance AI (wBAI), $122,000 from Chintai (CHEX), and $45,000 from Wrapped Pocket Network (wPOKT).
The stolen crypto was swiftly moved to the hackerâs wallet as two more transfers were conducted and re-directed automatically to a second wallet address, which was immediately identified due to its link with the notorious PinkDrainer hacking group.
At press time, neither MicroStrategy nor Michael Saylor had issued a public statement regarding the hack. However, it appears that the phishing X posts have been deleted, with MicroStrategy likely regaining control of its account.
Commenting on the incident, market watchers suggested that the phishing scam was rather obvious. Crypto investor Cobie, for instance, remarked that MicroStrategy, a company solely focused on BTC, is highly unlikely to roll out a token on the Ethereum blockchain:
âObviously trying not to be victim-blaming here, but you gotta be very special to think MicroStrategy is launching an ETH token after Saylor has spent multiple years very famously saying âthere is no second bestâ and âyou only use one chairâ etc.â
The attackerâs wallet currently holds a total of $321,916 worth of tokens from Ethereum, Polygon, and others.