TON-based wallet drainer shuts down, eyes Bitcoin

The TON-based drainer pointed its users toward a different draining service, saying it would not return.
The TON-based drainer pointed its users toward a different draining service, saying it would not return.

A wallet drainer on The Open Network (TON) said it was shutting down and directed its users to a different crypto-draining service. 

On Oct. 7, Web3 anti-scam solution Scam Sniffer shared a screenshot of a TON-based wallet drainer announcing its shutdown. The wallet drainer said there were not enough crypto whales in the community, which was bad for its business. The hackers wrote: 

“Due to TON not having whales and it being a small community, we will close.”

The wallet drainer directed its users to drain Bitcoin (BTC) instead. In the announcement, the hackers said that if their users “enjoyed draining” on TON, they would also “love” draining BTC. 

The drainer advertised a different service and said its TON-based drainer would not return. 

Drainers started to eye TON in June

In a previous Cointelegraph interview, Blockaid co-founder Raz Niv said they’ve seen more drainers become interested in TON. Niv explained: 

“We’re seeing a lot of drainers become more and more interested in the TON ecosystem [because] there is so much value streamed through TON.”

A TON drainer was also detected baiting users with a fake 5,000 USDt (USDT) transaction. The scam used TON’s comment feature, which lets transfers include a custom message, essentially masking the real purpose of signatures. 

Transfer messages show signs like “Receive 5,000 USDT” and a “Confirm” button. When a user signs the transaction, the token drain commences. 

In May, Scam Sniffer said that the trick had already been used to drain 22,000 Toncoin (TON) tokens, worth over $150,000 at the time. 

Related: LEGO removes crypto scam from homepage after being hacked: Report

Phishing scams drained $46 million in September

Meanwhile, Scam Sniffer data showed that about 10,800 victims were affected by phishing attacks in September and that about $46.6 million in digital assets was lost to phishing last month. Most of the losses came from one phishing transaction draining over $32 million in crypto

Phishing attacks trick crypto holders into linking their wallets to fraudulent services like drainers. This allows the malicious actors to withdraw their victim’s funds without further authentication.

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