User loses $570,000 worth of Mutant and Bored Ape NFTs to ‘fake verification’ scam

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A pseudonymous user, known as s27, today lost roughly $570,000 worth of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) after exchanging his Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) #1584 and two Mutant Ape Yacht Club (MAYC) tokens for fraudulent NFTs deceptively disguised as genuine.

The exchange was first spotted by crypto enthusiast Quit thanks to his Discord server configured to track ape listings that are at least 5% below their floor price in Ethereum (ETH):

The pings are rare, but when they happen it generally means one of two things: somebody is panic selling, or somebody is compromised. When I saw the notification for #1584, I instantly knew it was the latter.

Indeed, according to NFT marketplace OpenSeas records, BAYC #1584 as well as MAYC #13168 and MAYC #13169 were transferred from s27 to another address today literally for free.

Further, Quit discovered that not only did s27 transfer his valuable NFTs to a scammer, but he was also the initiator of the trade. As it turned out, s27 used Swap.Kiwi, a blockchain service that allows collectors to swap certain NFTs for others preferably of equal or greater value just like trading cards. But as usual, there was a catch.

Do your own research

Investigating further, Quit has tracked down the scammers NFTs that s27 received after the swap was made. All of them appeared as genuine BAYC tokens but only at first glance.

In reality, the green checkmark Swap.Kiwi uses to verify that tokens are really authentic can be easily counterfeited via a simple image editor and thats exactly what the scammer did. Essentially, he downloaded some jpegs depicting a few expensive BAYC apes and added a fake watermark so that they would appear like the real deal when displayed on Swap.Kiwi.

Of course, a deeper look into the scammers wallet would reveal that his tokens are anything but genuine, although a lot of crypto users oftentimes neglect such procedures, sadly.

Shortly after receiving the BAYC and two MAYC NFTs, the scammer sold them for 98.85 ETH (currently around $350,00), 23 ETH ($81,000), and 25.25 ETH ($90,000) worth a total of $521,000 at press time. However, these listings were lower than their corresponding floor prices, placing s27s potential loss in the ballpark of $570,000, according to Quit.

Meanwhile, NFT holders are seemingly becoming the prime target for scammers of all sorts who, in their turn, keep coming up with increasingly inventive schemes for their endeavors. As CryptoSlate reported, crypto users discovered a new wave of Discord NFT scams just yesterday, April 4. And it is very unlikely that bad actors are planning to dial down their activity any time soon.

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