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Hey, it's ya boy <font color="#00BFFF"><b>albanec</b></font> back with another deep dive into the tricks of <font color="#00BFFF">digital fraud</font>. If you've seen my other posts, you know I don't mess around with surface level nonsense. Today we're looking at <font color="#00BFFF">cryptodrainers</font> - something that's been making people <font color="#00FF7F">real money</font> in the blockchain underground.<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/G48PSQkD/image.png"/><br/> <br/> I've been in this game for years, watching trends rise and fall like empires. But cryptodrainers? These sneaky motherfuckers have <font color="#00FF7F">staying power</font>. As long as the crypto market keeps attracting <font color="#FF4500">overconfident investors</font>, there'll always be room for clever exploits to take their digital assets. A fool and his money are soon parted, some bastard once said.<br/> <br/> This guide is split into two parts. In this first part we're covering the basics: what are cryptodrainers, how they work and what affiliate programs are.<br/> Part two will be for you overachievers out there. We'll go in to how to get your feet wet by signing up to affiliate programs and deploying your own drainer. Because let's be real, running your own code is a fast track to a <font color="#FF4500">punch in the face prison</font> if you don't know what you're doing.<br/> <br/> For those new to the concept, cryptodrainers are <font color="#00BFFF">digital pickpocketing</font>, but for blockchain wallets. Instead of lifting physical wallets, we're emptying them with carefully crafted code. It's a beautifully simple concept with complex execution - one wrong move from a <font color="#FF4500">greedy dumbass</font> chasing the next big thing and their crypto takes an express trip to your wallet.<br/> <br/> But let's be clear: this isn't some amateur hour copy-paste job from a <font color="#FF4500">shady Telegram group</font>. We're talking about a sophisticated blend of <font color="#00BFFF">social engineering</font>, <font color="#00BFFF">smart contract manipulation</font> and good old fashioned fraud. Done right it's more profitable than printing money. Fuck it up and you might find yourself on the wrong end of a <font color="#FF4500">blockchain forensics investigation</font>.<br/> <br/> So sit back and pay attention. By the time were done with part one you'll know the basics of cryptodrainers and how to make money without writing a line of code. Lets get in to it and see how deep this rabbit hole goes.<br/> <br/> <font color="White"><font size="5"><b>What the Fuck Are Cryptodrainers?</b></font></font><br/> Lets break this down. Cryptodrainers are sophisticated pieces of malware that siphon cryptocurrencies and NFTs from victims wallets. Think of them as <font color="#00BFFF">digital vacuum cleaners</font>, sucking up tokens and balances from an unsuspecting dumbass who approves a contract request.<br/> <br/> At their heart, cryptodrainers exploit the fundamental feature of blockchain technology: the <font color="#00FF7F">irreversibility of transactions</font>. Once a transaction is confirmed on the blockchain it's about as reversible as your drunk texts to your ex at 3am. This makes crypto theft perfect for us fraudsters - no chargebacks, no buyer protection, just pure profit.<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/tp2Cfqdv/image.png"/> <br/> <br/> These drainers pretend to be legit <font color="#00BFFF">Web3 DApps</font>, <font color="#00BFFF">NFT minting sites</font> or other crypto services. The victim connects their wallet thinking they're about to score the next big NFT or get in on some exclusive presale. Instead they've just given away the keys to their life savings.<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/JwGD0Ysv/image.png"/> <br/> <br/> What makes cryptodrainers so damn profitable? A few things:<ul><li>1. <font color="#00FF7F">Low overhead</font>: Unlike traditional cybercrime and scams you don't need a botnet or expensive infrastructure. Just some code and a place to host it.</li> <li>2. <font color="#00FF7F">High returns</font>: We're talking six or seven figure hauls from a single drain. Makes carding look like a lemonade stand operation. All you need is one rich fucker to accept your contract.</li> <li>3. <font color="#00FF7F">Scalability</font>: One drainer can hit multiple victims at once. It's like fishing with dynamite in a barrel full of crypto bros.</li> <li>4. <font color="#00FF7F">Psychological exploitation</font>: Crypto markets are driven by FOMO (Fear of Missing Out). Drainers exploit this, creating a sense of urgency that makes victims ignore red flags.</li> </ul><br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/W4T8SXxc/image.png"/> <br/> <br/> Now why won't this gravy train stop anytime soon? Easy:<br/> First, the crypto space is a <font color="#FF8C00">regulatory wild west</font>. By the time lawmakers figure out how to even make their cases, we'll be onto the next exploit.<br/> Second, there's always <font color="#00FF7F">fresh meat</font>. New investors enter the crypto space daily, each one a potential dumbass who thinks they're too smart to fall for a scam.<br/> Lastly, the tech keeps evolving. New chains, new wallets, new DeFi protocols - each one is a <font color="#00FF7F">new attack surface</font> to be exploited.<br/> <blockquote>Bottom line: As long as there's crypto, there'll be cryptodrainers. It's digital darwinism at its finest - separating fools from their money with ruthless efficiency. The more rich crypto dumbasses there are, the better for us.</blockquote><font color="white"><font size="5"><b>The Guts of a Cryptodrainer</b></font></font><br/> Lets cut the crap and get into how these digital pickpockets actually work. Cryptodrainers aren't your grandpas phishing scam - they're a fucking masterclass in exploiting both human psychology and blockchain tech.<br/> <br/> At the core, these bastards prey on two main weaknesses:<br/> 1. Users <font color="#FF4500">blind trust</font> in web3 interfaces<br/> 2. The powerful (and dangerous) <font color="#00BFFF">automation of smart contracts</font><br/> <br/> Here's how a typical drain goes down:<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/0jDYcWYz/image.png"/><br/> <br/> 1. <b><font color="#FF8C00">The Hook</font></b> - First you need a convincing front. Could be a fake NFT mint, a too-good-to-be-true DeFi protocol, or some bullshit "play-to-earn" game. The key is making it look legit enough to pass the sniff test of your average crypto bro.<br/> 2. <b><font color="#FF8C00">The Handshake</font></b> - Once the mark is on the site, they're prompted to connect their wallet. MetaMask, Trust Wallet, whatever - doesn't matter. Soon as they hit "Connect", the traps set.<br/> 3. <b><font color="#FF8C00">The Sleight of Hand</font></b> - This is where the real magic happens. The drainer deploys a <font color="#FF4500">malicious smart contract</font>. To the user, it looks like a standard approval for minting an NFT or staking some shitcoin. In reality, they're signing their own financial death warrant.<br/> 4. <b><font color="#FF8C00">The Vacuum</font></b> - With approval granted, the smart contract goes to town. Tokens, NFTs, whatevers not nailed down - it all gets sucked out from the poor bastards wallet.<br/> <br/> Now, lets get technical. The real magic happens with two functions: <font color="#00BFFF">setApprovalForAll</font> and <font color="#00BFFF">safeTransferFrom</font>.<br/> <br/> <b><font color="#00FF00">SetApprovalForAll</font></b>: This looks harmless. Its like handing over a blank check. It gives the contract permission to do whatever the hell it wants with the victims assets. When a user signs a transaction granting setApprovalForAll, they're giving the smart contract permission to transfer their entire balance of the token contract its called on.<br/> <br/> <b><font color="#00FF00">SafeTransferFrom</font></b>: This is often used with setApprovalForAll. It allows the contract to transfer specific NFTs or tokens from the victims wallet to the attackers. The "safe" in the name? Just irony when its in the wrong hands.<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/rGJMDD2S/image.png"/> <br/> <br/> The best part? Its all "<font color="#00FF00">legitimate</font>" in the eyes of the blockchain. The user approved the transaction, after all. No hacking, no stolen keys - just pure exploitation of trust and greed.<br/> <br/> The funniest part is once that drain starts, there's <font color="#FBA026">no stopping it</font>. Remember how I said blockchain transactions are irreversible? Yeah, that's a bitch when you're on the wrong end of a drainer.<br/> <br/> Advanced drainers take this to the <font color="#00FF00">next level</font>. They'll check wallet balances in real-time, prioritize high-value assets, they will scrape all possible blockchain a wallet can have assets on and drain them like a crypto plumber.<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/XZTmd6my/image.png"/><br/> <br/> The social engineering aspect is also key. These drainers often pose as legitimate minting processes or airdrops. They'll create a sense of urgency or exclusivity and get users to act fast without checking the transaction details. Thats why you'll see a surge of drains during hyped NFT mints or token launches. <font color="#00FF00">Its the perfect time for us to hit!</font><br/> <br/> <font color="white"><font size="5"><b>The Cat and Mouse Game: Wallet Providers vs Drainers</b></font></font><br/> Now you might be thinking, "Surely wallet providers aren't just sitting on their ass while their users get drained?" And you'd be right. They're not complete <font color="#E25041">idiots</font> - just mostly idiots. Wallet providers have been trying to implement security measures, but remember, crypto is decentralized and there's not much these wallet fuckers can actually do against <font color="#E25041">human stupidity.</font><br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/d4NFd830/image.png"/> <br/> <br/> For example, <font color="#00BFFF">MetaMask</font>, the crypto wallet king, has a few tricks:<br/> 1. <b><font color="#FF0000">Blacklisting - </font></b>They have a list of known malicious addresses and contracts. Problem is, its reactive. By the time an address is blacklisted, the drainers already moved on to a new one.<br/> 2. <b><font color="#FF0000">Warning prompts -</font></b> Those annoying pop-ups that ask "Are you sure you want to give full access to your wallet?" Yeah, those. But lets be real - when has a warning ever stopped a crypto bro from chasing gains?<br/> 3. <b><font color="#FF0000">Simulation runs -</font></b> MetaMask tries to simulate what a transaction will do before you approve it. Nice, but advanced drainers can obfuscate their real intentions.<br/> <br/> <font color="#00BFFF">Trust Wallet</font> and others have similar measures. They're all playing catch-up, always one step behind the latest drainer tech.<br/> <br/> But here's where it gets fun. Good drainers are evolving faster than wallet security:<br/> 1. <b><font color="#00FF00">Dynamic contract generation -</font></b> Instead of reusing blacklisted contracts, top-tier drainers generate new contracts on the fly. Its like having a new identity for every crime.<br/> 2. <b><font color="#00FF00">Obfuscation techniques -</font></b> By splitting the malicious code across multiple contracts or using proxy contracts, drainers can bypass simulation checks.<br/> 3. <b><font color="#00FF00">Front-end trickery -</font></b> Some drainers use JavaScript to modify the transaction data displayed to the user, making it look legit even when its not.<br/> 4. <b><font color="#00FF00">Multi-chain attacks -</font></b> Why stop at one blockchain? Advanced drainers hit multiple chains at once, often faster than you can react to an alert.<br/> <br/> Its a neverending arms race. Wallet providers patch a hole, drainers find two more. Its beautiful chaos, and for us on the right side of the drain, its a goldmine that keeps on giving.<br/> <br/> <font color="white"><font size="5"><b>Affiliate Models</b></font></font><br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/PGyzKzBm/image.png"/> <br/> <br/> 'This sounds great, but I cant code for shit.' Well dry your tears because the world of cryptodrainers has opened its arms to even the most code-illiterate among autists. Let's go to the world of drainer affiliate programs.<br/> <br/> Companies like <font color="#00BFFF">CryptoGrab</font>, <font color="#00BFFF">Inferno Drainer</font> and others have turned cryptodraining into a plugand-play business model. Here's how it works:<br/> 1. These companies develop advanced constantly updated drainers.<br/> 2. They offer these drainers to affiliates (thats you idiot) for a cut of the profits.<br/> 3. You deploy the drainer and drive traffic to it and watch the money roll in.<br/> 4. The company takes their cut (usually around 20-30%) and you keep the rest.<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/CKbHcWCT/image.png"/> <br/> <br/> Now 30% might sound like a big cut but lets be real - its a small price to pay for a turnkey operation into one of the most <font color="#00FF00">profitable</font> scams out there. Plus you're not going to get that 30% if you're sitting on your ass doing nothing because you cant code a drainer yourself.<br/> <br/> This is actually <font color="#00FF00">insane</font> business wise. You don't need a PHD in computer science to get started. If you can copypaste and whip up a half decent phishing site, you're good to go. These companies have teams working 24/7 to keep their drainers up to date so you always have the latest bypasses for popular wallets. You can also play dumb if shit hits the fan. 'Oh, I'm just an affiliate your honor. I didn't write that nasty code.' Not that it'll save your ass in court but hey, every little helps right? The best part is you can set up in multiple areas of the crypto world with minimal effort. Its kinda like fishing with dynamite in a whole fucking ocean.<br/> <br/> Seriously, look how fucking <font color="#00FF00">sick</font> this is, a Cryptodrainer incorporated themselves as an official company and even attended a conference, gave out merchandise, and advertised.<br/> All with a bunch of hot chicks! Peak absurdity, it's crazy <font color="#FBA026">hilarious</font> lmao!<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/RpK8q15Z/image.png"/><br/> <br/> Now to get back to topic: getting your feet wet in this game isn't as simple as signing up for a newsletter. You wont find these affiliate programs plastered all over LinkedIn, that's for damn sure. You'll need to do some digging in the darker corners of the web. Its all about who you know in this world so start making some friends.<br/> <br/> Also note that not every offer out there is legit. Some of these so-called 'affiliate programs'' are just waiting to <font color="#E25041">pull the rug out from under you</font> and vanishing with your gains. Its almost poetic, scammers getting scammed. But were not here for poetry <font color="#00FF00">were here for profit</font>. So constant paranoia and skepticism is warranted. Don't worry though as Ive always got your back. In the next installment were going to dive deep into setting up your very own drainer with a reputable crypto affiliate.<br/> <br/> <font color="white"><font size="5"><b>Conclusion: What's Next</b></font></font><br/> Alright you degenerates we've covered a lot today. You've got the basics of cryptodrainers down and you're probably ready to get your hands dirty. Well, hold onto your hats because were just getting started.<br/> <br/> In the next installment were going full throttle. I'm talking step-by-step, no bullshit guide to setting up your very own drainer with a reputable crypto affiliate. Well cover everything from finding reputable programs to deploying your first drain. No stone left unturned, no wallet left un-emptied.<br/> <br/> By the time were done you'll be the digital equivalent of Robin Hood - if Robin Hood was a greedy bastard who kept every coin for himself. Get ready to turn those crypto dreams into cold hard reality.<br/> <br/> <img alt="" border="0" class="bbCodeImage" src="https://i.ibb.co/VWhqLNqc/image.png"/> <br/> <br/> <font color="#FF8C00"><b>Until then, get to know the crypto world. And for fucks sake, don't fall for someone else's drainer while you're at it. That would be embarrassing <img alt="" border="0" class="inlineimg" src="images/smilies/trollface.png" title="Trollface"/></b></font> </div> |
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any experiences with: <a href="https://cryptograb.io/" target="_blank">https://cryptograb.io/</a><br> are they legit?<br> you can also contact me on tg: @Neverbrokeagain24<br> <br> <font size="1"><font color="#535353">Добавлено через 15 секунд</font></font><br> any experiences with: <a href="https://cryptograb.io/" target="_blank">https://cryptograb.io/</a><br> are they legit?<br> you can also contact me on tg: @Neverbrokeagain24 </br></br></br></br></br></br></br></div> |
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