…also be extremely wary of unexpected/random airdrops of tokens into your wallet…you might try to swap them for ETH thinking it’s “free money” but it can serve as a trojan horse to gain access to your wallet…it’s relatively harmless when it’s added to your wallet (you cannot prevent this) but the danger occurs when you attempt to swap these free tokens…if it’s an airdrop that you coordinated from a reputable exchange/project etc. then that’s fine
This ain’t my first rodeo on the internet my man. I ain’t clicked on no janky looking links since 1999 when my young, dumb ass thought those hoes in that pop up ad REALLY were local and wanted to meet or I REALLY thought I was the one millionth visitor to xyz website and that they were really gonna send me a free laptop
There’s actually a data breach within Metro/T-Mobile right now and I was a victim of it. Inside job. Some 20 year old making $12 bucks an hour selling information to hackers for a percentage of the stolen loot or a flat rate. I had the “high security” features on my account, thinking I’m Gucci. But all that shyt is no good if some greasy faced teenagers can just bypass all of that shyt with an employee login![]()
Figured.First having 30k on metamask is retarded. Second he didn’t even get hacked he connected his wallet to some shady crypto sites like a idiot![]()
Dude has plenty in an offline wallet I'm sureProbably loaded
Never even knew this was a thingThese fakkits got me with that sim swap bullshyt through MetroPCS. Where they pretty much clone your phone remotely and then they can access your secured data and apps like Coinbase, PayPal, your bank account, etc. not only did they wipe out my crypto, they started wiring themselves money and credit from my checking/PayPal accounts
Got all my money back from the bank and PayPal. It’s just Coinbase playing Smokey and Craig to my Big Worm![]()