Let's examine them point by point: 

 

1. Fake help desk 

Fraudsters pretend to be employees of a popular NFT marketplace, such as OpenSea, and try to gain access to the user's private keys or sell him fake NFTs during their communication. 

To do this, scammers create messenger accounts with names like "OpenSea Support." 

As soon as the potential victim mentions his/her problems in the chat, the pseudo support representatives are the first to write to him/her.  

How not to get caught? 

My advice is not to report your problems in chats - contact the technical support directly through the ticket or accounts listed on the project page.  

Never give anyone your account information, private keys, the Marketplace employees simply do not need them. 


2. Fake links to create NFTs 

Scammers place fake links in chats and channels to the sites where NFT chasing will allegedly take place. 

By clicking on them, users sync their wallets with the scammers' site and lose