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At Least $13M in NFTs Stolen After Bored Ape Yacht Club Instagram, Discord Hacked (coindesk.com) 62

Bored Ape Yacht Club's Instagram account and Discord server were both hacked on Monday, with an unofficial "mint" link being sent out to followers. From a report: "There is no mint going on today. It looks like BAYC Instagram was hacked. Do not mint anything, click links, or link your wallet to anything," the NFT project wrote on Twitter. At the time of writing, it is estimated that around 24 Bored Apes and 30 Mutant Apes have been stolen according to recent OpenSea transfers, although some of these may be holders transferring their NFTs for security purposes. The value of the 54 NFTs calculated by floor price is $13.7 million.
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At Least $13M in NFTs Stolen After Bored Ape Yacht Club Instagram, Discord Hacked

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  • Good ~nt~ (Score:4, Funny)

    by OverlordQ ( 264228 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @12:00PM (#62476998) Journal

    ~nt~

  • No Fucking Trust. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by splutty ( 43475 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @12:01PM (#62477002)

    NFT's mating call.

  • Nothing of value (Score:5, Interesting)

    by kbg ( 241421 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @12:03PM (#62477018)

    ...and nothing of value was lost

  • I have a lot of money on the floor of my room, in the form of dirty pants. I value them ad $300,000 each, on average.
    • I have a lot of money on the floor of my room, in the form of dirty pants. I value them ad $300,000 each, on average.

      Well, I'm not willing to touch them, however send me the photos(*) and for $20k each and 50% of the profits beyond $10k, I can make you an NFT for each one that you can sell to the disfranchised (dissimiea? disembowled?) members of the Bored Ape Club at a 10% discount to make up for their terrible losses. I think they really deserve this form of charity.

      * N.B. there may be some extra charges for emotional damage.

    • I have a lot of money on the floor of my room, in the form of dirty pants. I value them ad $300,000 each, on average

      You're off by one degree of clothing. Go one step deeper and then you can have real value, just like in Japan.
  • If this was a bank (Score:4, Insightful)

    by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @12:07PM (#62477044) Homepage Journal

    I'd call them up. Freeze my accounts. And file a police report. Given that it likely goes beyond the borders of my state and the large amount, it would escalate to a federal agency.

    Since it's not a bank. We'll I guess easy come easy go. You were warned only a few thousand times that this crypto shit was an unregulated wild west. Expect a few stage coach robberies when there is no marshal in sight.

    • by lactose99 ( 71132 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @12:34PM (#62477192)

      They want none of the regulation but all of the protection.

      Can't have one without the other.

      • I would concede that traditional banking could be improved. But I was never keen on throwing everything away and starting over. It's more of that nonsense from tech "disrupters" that comes off as equally arrogant and stupid.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @01:29PM (#62477470)

      If this was a bank, nothing like that would be possible. The regulator would have closed them down after both internal and external audit rang the alert bells.

      • Exactly. If there's one thing I'm sure of, it's that no one's ever stolen anything from a bank.
        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          Exactly. If there's one thing I'm sure of, it's that no one's ever stolen anything from a bank.

          Your statement is stupid. Of course, occasionally, something gets stolen from a bank. But compare the frequency and the amount and remember that most banks are exposed to the Internet permanently.

          • Do you have some hard numbers on worldwide bank fraud / robberies? If so please share / compare but otherwise please stop being a fucking retard. For the record, blockchain is by definition more exposed to internet than banks (and more permanently). Again, you're a fucking retard.
            • by gweihir ( 88907 )

              No, I am actually an IT security auditor (among other things). I have an idea how things work in the real world. You obviously do not. Pathetic.

  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @12:09PM (#62477058)

    Scammers scammed - Hilarity ensues.

  • NFT, cryptocurrencies, metaverse real estate; are all the same thing: essentially nothing. Just 1s and 0s on computer storage somewhere. Yet, this is how people are getting rich in our current economy.

    • https://www.priority1design.com.au/rfid_reader_modules.html

      Not saying you're wrong but... What do you think "real" money is today?

      Or do you still plan to reclaim your dollar bills' equivalent weight in gold some day?

      • Not saying you're wrong but... What do you think "real" money is today?
         
        ...Backed by real countries, governments, and militaries? And running with (in many cases) long, unbroken streaks of being fungibly exchanged for almost anything?

        • ...and is good to pay your yearly mandatory taxes with
      • by Luthair ( 847766 )
        With money you can always pay your taxes & debts, no one is required to accept bitcoin.
    • by leptons ( 891340 )
      Some people may be getting rich, but most of them are throwing their money away. Vice did an interesting segment on NFTs, and it just looked like these people are huffing each other's farts. The round of applause when some rich idiot paid $500k for an NFT of a jpeg, was just the same exact kind of positive feedback in a cult when someone drinks the kool-aide. "one of us, one of us" They're cheering on the evaporation of each other's wealth. They all seemed really clueless and just desperate to be part of t
    • It's not exactly nothing. One of these days a financial advisor is going to convince my Dad and people like him to "diversify" into a crypto ETF (exchange-traded fund) or mutual fund (high fees + crypto-ponzi scam) and suck away his middle class retirement into this toilet bowl De-Fi fad.

  • Good. No value has been lost.
  • Bored Ape Yacht Club doubly so.

  • A fool and his money are soon parted. NFTs will go down as one of the biggest scams in history.

  • but block chain, the under riding technology driving the not fracking there (NFT) nonsense and crypto world is suppose to be the ultimate answer is tracking and security!?!?!
  • by JoeyRox ( 2711699 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @12:38PM (#62477212)
    Good luck collecting insurance on the notional value.
  • Wait, no I won't. Bored Apes, Open Sea, Mutant Apes, who gives a shit.
  • This is just how cryptocoin works. It's deregulated and secure, right? Looks like business as usual in the world of Crypto.
  • Or in real world actual value money, about $20 worth of time and bandwidth.
  • The only thing any of this crypto is good for is creating permanent coherent records in a public ledger.

    Things like land deeds and so forth are already on a public ledger, but are not permanently recorded ("sorry, cant find any record of of that"), and are too often not fully coherent (where there exits multiple documents filed away that disagree as to who owns a parcel)
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Well, yes and no. It can in theory do that, but that requires a) absence of morons mistaking this for gambling b) assholes trying to defraud the morons and c) actual security and usability and performance. No, "smart" contracts that are more likely to screw _you_ over on the tiniest mistake do not qualify.

      Hence at the moment all these crapcoins are good for is exactly nothing, except maybe identifying morons and assholes.

    • by splutty ( 43475 )

      That's blockchain, not crypto. And blockchain has plenty of really good real life applications (and is used for that).

      This whole crypto currency/NFT/whatevertheycomeupwith bullshit on top of blockchain technology is just scammers, liars and conmen (ab)using a system the plebs don't understand to enrich themselves.

    • "Things like land deeds and so forth are already on a public ledger, but are not permanently recorded ("sorry, cant find any record of of that"), "

        More like if you give them a few grand, they will actually get up and walk to the file cabinet that it's kept in.

  • Moron after finding out expensive hot air is still just hot air....

  • by sarren1901 ( 5415506 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @01:31PM (#62477478)

    I need to come up with a shell company, issue out some NFTs. Oops, got stolen. I "lost something". No taxes due for me because I lost something trying to conduct business. Ahh Shucks.

  • formerly known as 'bored'.

    • It's funny how these morons can't see the huge directed insult baked into the very foundation of this crap. So I'll tell them:

      "Yes, they think you are a bored ape and just as stupid.'

  • by Revek ( 133289 ) on Monday April 25, 2022 @01:42PM (#62477522)
    Is that like tree fiddy in real money?
  • I hate that Discord and other closed-source "services" have taken over messaging. There is no reason for it.

    • I also hate it, but there is a reason. Discord innovated significantly past irc with voice chat, inline images, screen share, etc. They also have a stealthy secret to success - emailing people notifications so they come back. Plus being able to run it in a web browser is low friction. A competing open source option needs to be as feature full, sticky, and ideally as easy/free to get started with and no OSS competitor comes close. If you have those skills, please make it happen:)
  • STOP! Just stop, turn around, walk away, and promise never to do that again

  • I guess that means every NFT in existence was stolen several trillion times?
  • Using highly sophisticated digital forensic techniques, I found the missing Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs.

    First, I entered "stolen bored ape yacht club NFTs" into my Google search bar. Then I clicked on the "Images" tab. The stolen NFTs appeared in my browser window. No doubt the Google cache is being used a dead drop for the NFTs by the cybercriminals, possibly in exchange for local weather reports and cocktail wienie recipes, which also turned up in other parts of the Google cache. THE FBI has been noti

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