Vacation for three days, but my wallet was emptied—this is no joke.
Some time ago, I was on vacation with my family at a luxury hotel, and only before leaving did I realize there was not a single penny left in my account. The most bizarre part is that I didn’t do anything "dangerous." I didn’t click on suspicious links, didn’t sign any malicious transactions, and didn’t even interact with any strange decentralized applications.
After several hours of in-depth investigation, with the help of experts I hired, I finally figured out what happened. The culprit was actually very simple: hotel WiFi, a phone call, and a series of my own basic mistakes.
**How it all started**
As a cryptocurrency professional, I always carry my laptop when I go out, thinking I can handle work during spare moments with my wife and kids. She insisted I put down the laptop and enjoy the holiday properly. If I had listened to her, this wouldn’t have happened.
The hotel WiFi was like all public networks—no password required, just connect and log in through a verification page.
I was working normally in the room, not doing anything out of the ordinary: didn’t create a new wallet, didn’t click on any links randomly, just checked Twitter, looked at my balance, and chatted on Discord and Telegram. Everything seemed perfectly normal.
Then a crypto friend called me. We talked about market trends, Bitcoin’s movement, and recent developments in the crypto market. But I didn’t realize that someone around me was...
This was the critical turning point of the story. The seemingly harmless three factors—public network environment, receiving a phone call, and some threats I didn’t notice—ultimately led to this disaster.
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MetaEggplant
· 01-12 08:52
The public network is really a deep pit, bro. You were quite careless this time.
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RatioHunter
· 01-10 23:56
Bro, I really can't hold it anymore this time. In a public network environment, you still dare to check the balance over the phone? No wonder the wallet was directly emptied.
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HalfBuddhaMoney
· 01-10 04:57
Public networks are really a trap, it's easy to mess up when listening to my wife halfway haha
View OriginalReply0
ProveMyZK
· 01-09 09:59
Wow, the public network is really amazing. This guy is truly having a tough time.
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MidnightSnapHunter
· 01-09 09:59
You really shouldn't touch the public network, brother. I'll just say the public network.
View OriginalReply0
LucidSleepwalker
· 01-09 09:56
Bro, this round is an upgraded version of the pig-butchering scam, with public network + mobile phone eavesdropping, making it hard to defend against.
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ForumMiningMaster
· 01-09 09:51
Public Wi-Fi connecting to the wallet is really crazy, I knew I should have listened to my wife
View OriginalReply0
MeaninglessGwei
· 01-09 09:48
Bro, is this a scam or real? Can listening to calls on the public network really drain your account? What are the details?
Vacation for three days, but my wallet was emptied—this is no joke.
Some time ago, I was on vacation with my family at a luxury hotel, and only before leaving did I realize there was not a single penny left in my account. The most bizarre part is that I didn’t do anything "dangerous." I didn’t click on suspicious links, didn’t sign any malicious transactions, and didn’t even interact with any strange decentralized applications.
After several hours of in-depth investigation, with the help of experts I hired, I finally figured out what happened. The culprit was actually very simple: hotel WiFi, a phone call, and a series of my own basic mistakes.
**How it all started**
As a cryptocurrency professional, I always carry my laptop when I go out, thinking I can handle work during spare moments with my wife and kids. She insisted I put down the laptop and enjoy the holiday properly. If I had listened to her, this wouldn’t have happened.
The hotel WiFi was like all public networks—no password required, just connect and log in through a verification page.
I was working normally in the room, not doing anything out of the ordinary: didn’t create a new wallet, didn’t click on any links randomly, just checked Twitter, looked at my balance, and chatted on Discord and Telegram. Everything seemed perfectly normal.
Then a crypto friend called me. We talked about market trends, Bitcoin’s movement, and recent developments in the crypto market. But I didn’t realize that someone around me was...
This was the critical turning point of the story. The seemingly harmless three factors—public network environment, receiving a phone call, and some threats I didn’t notice—ultimately led to this disaster.