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Community Warns of Hundreds of Fake Arbitrum Airdrops

Community Warns of Hundreds of Fake Arbitrum Airdrops

Fraudsters have created numerous fake websites ahead of Arbitrum’s ARB token airdrop, scheduled for March 23, according to security researchers.

Redefine researchers spotted a site masquerading as the legitimate Arbitrum airdrop. It asks visitors to grant access to their funds, risking theft.

In turn, CertiK colleagues pointed to a fake Arbitrum Twitter account advertising the airdrop.

A Reddit user known as CryptoMaximalist posted a thread, in which he also described fake Twitter accounts with links to fraudulent sites. He urged users to thoroughly verify a profile and its history before visiting any third-party resources.

According to the Web3 Scam Sniffer analytics tool, there are more than 273 phishing sites tied to Arbitrum. It is expected that the number will continue to rise before the official airdrop.

The Arbitrum Foundation will distribute 10 billion governance tokens, enabling holders to vote on changes to the code of Arbitrum One and Nova. A project-designed scoring system identifies users eligible to receive ARB.

Among those included will be users who completed more than four transactions or interacted with at least four smart contracts, transferred funds to the Arbitrum One chain, and provided more than $50,000 in liquidity on Arbitrum.

Data: Nansen.

According to analyses by Nansen, who helped develop the criteria with Arbitrum, of more than 2.3 million wallets connected to the Arbitrum One network by February 6, only 625,143 are eligible to participate in the airdrop.

Back in January, CoinMarketCap fake airdrops.

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