I just got hit for a ton of eth 3 meta wallets drained. Anyone heard anything or could help point me in the right direction of what to do? No idea how they accessed my funds.

  • leovin@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Another warning: do not use MetaMask or any browser extension wallet for anything other than screwing around or testing contracts. It is NOT secure.

  • jetlijonny@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    My metamask also got drained a while back. likely they have got access to your PC and hacked your metamask key and logged the password when you typed on keyboard. Could have been a malicious program or email phishing. This is what happened to me anyway.

  • Adi210181@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I m so sorry to hear this. Revoke.cash to revoke given permissions is the only thing you could do. Consider your wallet burned and the money gone. There s no way to get your assets back once they get transferred out.

  • AmericanScream@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    No problem. Just call Metamask customer service. They’ll happily fix things for you.

    Oh wait… you’re your own bank. Never mind.

  • NewConsideration3210@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    What are the addresses? And where was the ETH sent? If the hacker ever sends the ETH to an exchange, you might have a chance at getting it back. But first, you need to file a police report.

  • Mean-Butterscotch894@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Your funds are lost. This is in the very nature of the blockchain, transactions are irreversible. You’ve been scammed. Anyone claiming that can help you is another scammer trying to scam you again. Sorry for your loss - you need to move on.

  • britishbengali007@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    You definitely turned on blind signing feature. It’s basically like how on every phone you have feature to turn on inorder to install third party apps that’d not from official sources as apks. But the crypto version blind signing

    • Ystebad@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      I’m sad to say but this kind of event does feed that narrative. Developers need to really work to eliminate this kind of threat if they want widespread adoption.

  • Lifter_Dan@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Hacked money is usually gone for good.

    The most valuable thing is to:

    a) Find out how it happened and what you did wrong

    b) Take actions in future to prevent it

    Did you have a hardware wallet that requires you to physically approve transactions on the external device before metamask submits them? If not, that would be the first step. Trezor I prefer over Ledger, because Ledger’s lax security allows data leaks exposing us to scammer contacts and they had some other questionable plans.

    Did you store your seed phrase somewhere secure and inaccessible to 3rd parties or internet?

    Did you use a seed passphrase when setting up your wallet (13th word or 25th word) that require you to type that passphrase when doing a transaction?

    These might sound like a pain, but they’re really pretty easy once you’ve done it once and it prevents malware from executing transactions on your PC without you physical approval.

  • Red5point1@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    if you had given access to your wallet to apps in the past to take part in their project s then there’s potential for them to have the ability to drain your wallet.
    There have been some failed projects that resorted to do that.