Sure, here is the technical breakdown: Malicious contract is named "Fake_Phishing3746335" (0x880C95246D7525b84902E6c040818a7C72d3Aa77) on HyperEVM. It targets Hyperswap V3 LP NFT positions, draining everything via a single cryptographic approval. Full step-by-step video presentation, Zendesk support logs, and blockchain transcripts are fully compiled in a public dossier on X (Twitter) under my identical username: UladzislauFiod. Check it out there for absolute verification.
Sure, here is the technical breakdown: Malicious contract is named "Fake_Phishing3746335" (0x880C95246D7525b84902E6c040818a7C72d3Aa77) on HyperEVM. It targets Hyperswap V3 LP NFT positions, draining everything via a single cryptographic approval. Full step-by-step video presentation, Zendesk support logs, and blockchain transcripts are fully compiled in a public dossier on X (Twitter) under my identical username: UladzislauFiod. Check it out there for absolute verification.
HyperSwap isn't affiliated with Hyperliquid. So complaining to Hyperliquid is not appropriate.
Hyperswap, like all other X accounts, is unable to delete the posting from the "imposter" HyperswaPPER X account that drained your funds.
The bottom line is you have to be REALLY careful about approving any requests from dApps hosted by non-credible sites like this.
The theft of your funds is one of the reasons I'm spending my time developing a safer crypto wallet that should be much more resistant to these types of incidents.
HyperSwap isn't affiliated with Hyperliquid. So complaining to Hyperliquid is not appropriate.
Hyperswap, like all other X accounts, is unable to delete the posting from the "imposter" HyperswaPPER X account that drained your funds.
The bottom line is you have to be REALLY careful about approving any requests from dApps hosted by non-credible sites like this.
The theft of your funds is one of the reasons I'm spending my time developing a safer crypto wallet that should be much more resistant to these types of incidents.
For anyone wondering about the HyperSwap hack, the victim saw a X post from HyperswapperX in a reply to HyperswapX. He didn't notice the spelling error. He was lured to the dApp which then gave a blind transaction that Metamask didn't flag as malicious. Result: complete loss of all funds.
Lesson: MetaMask security is pretty weak, especially w.r.t. hyperliquid EVM. Never blind sign on untrusted dApp sites.
For anyone wondering about the HyperSwap hack, the victim saw a X post from HyperswapperX in a reply to HyperswapX. He didn't notice the spelling error. He was lured to the dApp which then gave a blind transaction that Metamask didn't flag as malicious. Result: complete loss of all funds.
Lesson: MetaMask security is pretty weak, especially w.r.t. hyperliquid EVM. Never blind sign on untrusted dApp sites.