> This spring the Bored Ape Yacht Club Discord and Instagram accounts were hacked. The hackers sent a phishing link to the community. As a result of this phishing scam, users lost some Bored Apes, Mutant Apes, and other assets.
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> How many NFTs were stolen?
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> What is the total value of all NFTs stolen?
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> Show the percentage of compromised wallets that bought back more NFTs from the same collection that was stolen.
Hello everyone! on this dashboard we taking a look to Bored Ape Yacht Club hack and the stolen NFTs during this phishing. At first let’s take a look to the phishing process:
On 4th June 2022, The phisher take control of the Bored Ape Yacht Club’s official Instagram account and shared the scam link on the channel, Some people rushed into it without looking the address and have access to the phisher to send the their NFTs to his own wallet, so then he was free to sell the NFTs in a short time and complete the process.
Q1:How many NFTs were stolen?
As we see 135 different NFTs has been stolen from 45 different wallets, which is almost 3 NFTs per each wallet on average.
Also on the below chart we will see number of stolen NFTs by each collection:
As we see “Mutant Ape Yacht Club” collection had the highest share on this phishing with 7 NFTs.
Also We can see we have 2 more bored Ape type collections stolen here: 4 Bored Ape Yacht Club and 3 Bored ape pekennel Club.
Q2:What is the total value of all NFTs stolen?
For answering this question we look at the phisher’s selling activity after stealing the NFTs:
As we see “Bored Ape Yacht Club - 6623” was the most valuable stolen NFT with almost 345k $USD sale price, After that “Bored Ape Yacht Club - 6778” with 359k and “Bored Ape Yacht Club - 6178” with 345k $USD was the next most valuable ones.
Here is the total hacker’s earnings from the stolen NFTs:
Also in this chart, we can track each stolen NFTs sale time:
Q3: Show the percentage of compromised wallets that bought back more NFTs from the same collection that was stolen.
This diagram shows which collections and how many of each was bought again by the victim wallets , we see 22 NFTs from 14 different collections was bight back again by them, we see Desperate Apewives is the most collection bought back again by the victims wallets.
and If we want to know what percent of victim wallets did this purchases we can say:
Conclusion
- 135 different NFTs had been stolen from 45 different wallets by an scam link.
- “Mutant Ape Yacht Club” collection had the highest share on this phishing with 7 NFTs.
- The hacker gained 2.34m $USD from selling the stolen NFTs.
- The hacker sold the NFTs in less than an hour, and “Dead Fellaz” was the last NFT sold by him.
- “Bored Ape Yacht Club - 6623” was the most valuable stolen NFT with almost 345k $USD sale price.
- %24..4 of victim wallets purchased again from the same collections which they lost.