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OpenAI CTO’s Twitter hacked, shilling ‘scam’ crypto airdrop

The crypto community on Twitter warned others not to click on a link posted on OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati’s Twitter account, which promised a free airdrop.

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Crypto Twitter was flooded with warnings from users on June 2 after the Twitter account of Mira Murati, the chief technology officer of artificial intelligence firm OpenAI, was seemingly hacked to promote a “scam” cryptocurrency airdrop.

On June 2, Murati’s account tweeted what appeared to be a phishing link promising an airdrop of a purported ERC-20 token OPENAI named after the firm that created ChatGPT.

Murati has 126,200 followers on Twitter and has a verified account on the platform. The post was live for about an hour and viewed 79,600 times and retweeted 83 times before it was deleted.

Murati’s tweet promoted the airdrop of an ERC-20 token and linked to what appears to be a phishing website. Source: Twitter

The tweet’s author had restricted who could reply to the tweet, so others were unable to easily warn the link was a scam.

Related: Crypto phishing scams: How users can stay protected

Some Twitter users theorize that Murati was a victim of a SIM-swapping attack.

We don’t know what’s going on yet (SIM attack?)

But NO WAY this is really Mira. This is a scam. https://t.co/zlp4SsR41l

— Mark Jeffrey (@markjeffrey)

June 2, 2023

The website shared in the tweet is sophisticated and has seemingly directly copied the layout and site design of a real project called ChainGPT with some very slight tweaks — mainly its prompt to connect a crypto wallet.

The suspected phishing website (right) is similar to ChainGPT’s website (left).

A security researcher from blockchain security firm Beosin told Cointelegraph that the site uses an available crypto wallet draining kit that “lures visitors into signing requests.”

“Once the request is signed, the attacker will transfer NFTs and ERC-20 tokens out of the victim’s wallet,” Beosin’s researcher added.

Cointelegraph contacted Murati and OpenAI for comment on how the Twitter account was breached but did not immediately receive a response.

Update (June 2, 3:30 am UTC): This article has been updated with further information and comment from Beosin. It was updated again at 4:10 am UTC to correct the spelling of Mira Murati’s first name.

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