How Browser Wallet Permissions Were Exploited in the Latest LinkedIn Job Offer Scam

- Investor tricked via LinkedIn job interview scam loses ETH, SOL, and Azuki NFTs in wallet breach.
- Crypto phishing scams surged in April, with total losses topping $364 million, CertiK reports.
- Binance and white hats helped recover over $18M in April through coordinated recovery efforts.
A crypto investor lost a significant amount of digital assets after falling for a sophisticated phishing scam disguised as a LinkedIn job interview. While applying for jobs on LinkedIn, the victim was approached with a fake job offer by a ‘recruiter’ claiming to represent a top Web3 company. What began as a standard job application process quickly turned into a costly mistake.
After some standard back-and-forth, the recruiter sent a link for a test interview. Pressed by the countdown timer and misled by technical prompts, the victim unknowingly enabled permissions that exposed their browser wallet.
The result was a full compromise. The attacker drained the investor’s Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), and several high-value NFTs, including collectibles from the Azuki and BEANZ series.
Social Engineering Tactics Now Target Wallet Permissions
Unlike traditional hacking m…
The post How Browser Wallet Permissions Were Exploited in the Latest LinkedIn Job Offer Scam appeared first on Coin Edition.
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How Browser Wallet Permissions Were Exploited in the Latest LinkedIn Job Offer Scam

- Investor tricked via LinkedIn job interview scam loses ETH, SOL, and Azuki NFTs in wallet breach.
- Crypto phishing scams surged in April, with total losses topping $364 million, CertiK reports.
- Binance and white hats helped recover over $18M in April through coordinated recovery efforts.
A crypto investor lost a significant amount of digital assets after falling for a sophisticated phishing scam disguised as a LinkedIn job interview. While applying for jobs on LinkedIn, the victim was approached with a fake job offer by a ‘recruiter’ claiming to represent a top Web3 company. What began as a standard job application process quickly turned into a costly mistake.
After some standard back-and-forth, the recruiter sent a link for a test interview. Pressed by the countdown timer and misled by technical prompts, the victim unknowingly enabled permissions that exposed their browser wallet.
The result was a full compromise. The attacker drained the investor’s Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), and several high-value NFTs, including collectibles from the Azuki and BEANZ series.
Social Engineering Tactics Now Target Wallet Permissions
Unlike traditional hacking m…
The post How Browser Wallet Permissions Were Exploited in the Latest LinkedIn Job Offer Scam appeared first on Coin Edition.
Read More
