Hackers Steal $2.2 Million Worth of NFTs From Art Collector

It happened again.

The owner of the art gallery was tricked into believing that he had been a victim of a scam in which 15 NFTs were stolen. The thieves sold a lot of the haul.

I've been hacked. On December 30 of this year, the author said in a now- deleted message that all his apes were gone. Please help me, this just sold.

There are problems that are decentralized.

While many people are fond of the benefits of the decentralization of the system, it became a nuisance for the man who couldn't get his NFTs back.
The gallery owner was roasted on social media.
One user said that if there had been some kind of regulating authority in place that could have insured their investments against theft and fraud.
The transition of libertarian guys from pretending to 3D print a gun and overthrow the government to calling the cops about having their ape stolen is awesome.

Found and lost.

The OpenSea marketplace was able to give him one authority to help him. He was able to coordinate with the buyers of his images and get at least a few of them back.
OpenSea getting involved in a platform that is allegedly a speach of a speach wasn't lost on users. The platform's freezing of user accounts was criticized by many.
OpenSea said in an email to ArtNews that they take theft seriously and have policies in place to meet their obligations to the community.
As the popularity of NFTs increases, more people are going to have to come to terms with the implications of a decentralization financial system. At the very least, we will get more hilarious jokes about these idiots.
The Gallery owner had a multi million dollar NFT collection.

Artist shuts down because people steal their work to make NFTs.

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