Scammers Jump on STEPN Craze, Private Keys at Risk
Numerous websites impersonating the highly popular move-to-earn NFT game ‘STEPN’ have flooded the internet and are targeting unsuspecting users, cybersecurity experts warned earlier this week.
As shared by blockchain security firm Peckfield, the team has detected numerous phishing websites dedicated to mimicking Solana-based STEPN and stealing private keys from their NFT wallets.
#PeckShieldAlert #phishing PeckShield has detected a bath of @Stepnofficial phishing sites. They insert a false Metamask browser extension leading to stealing your seed phrase or prompt you to connect your wallets or “Claim” giveaway. @Metamask @Coinbase @WalletConnect @phantom pic.twitter.com/cmWUcprMAN
— PeckShieldAlert (@PeckShieldAlert) April 25, 2022
Fake STEPN websites contain fraudulent digital wallet plugins that can later be used to steal the private keys from unsuspecting victims, explained experts from Peckfield.
According to them, phishing websites trick users into providing private information like their wallet’s private keys or seed phrases, which are required to access funds within the wallet. Such websites usually have a similar, although slightly different domain name than the legit ones, which imposters attempt to mimic.
The fraudsters typically promise giveaways and steal the private data once the unsuspecting victims connect their digital wallets to claim the advertised “free tokens”. However, instead of additional funds, the majority of them find out drained accounts as private keys guarantee fraudsters access to their digital holdings.
Digital wallets like MetaMask, Coinbase Wallet, Phantom Wallet, and Wallet Connect are among the most mimicked for malicious attacks on fake STEPN websites, Peckfield warned.
The STEPN team has not yet issued any comment on the attacks against its users.
The NFT gaming and fitness app took the cryptocurrency space by storm just a month ago after it offered a new way to generate passive income, simply by being physically active.
Since then, the price of STEPN has climbed by nearly 3,600%, and the move-to-earn game has recorded 1.7 million active users over time.
The sprouting of these scams seems to have done little harm to STEPN’s price in the past 24 hours as the game’s governance token, GMT, climbed up by more than 8% to $3.47 earlier today. STEPN currently sits approximately 11% below its $3.80 all-time high reached on April 20th.
Read more: https://dailycoin.com/scammers-joined-stepn-craze-private-keys-at-risk/
Text source: DailyCoin.com