Crypto Platform ARBIX Flagged As a Rugpull, Transfers $10 Million (bleepingcomputer.com) 62
Arbix Finance, an audited and supposedly trustworthy yield farming platform, has been flagged as a 'rugpull,' deleting its site, Twitter, and Telegram channel and transferring $10 million worth of deposited cryptocurrency. Bleeping Computer reports: Rugpulls, otherwise known as "exit scams," are when pseudo-anonymous platforms or cryptocurrencies are created twith the ultimate goal of collecting funds for an allegedly legitimate "service" and then disappear with deposited funds. Because decentralized networks are inherently untrustworthy, entities like CertiK attempt to evaluate them through audits that analyze a token's smart contracts for signs of fraud, vulnerabilities, privacy problems, etc. In Arbix's case, CertiK's conducted an audit on November 19th, 2021, whose findings had initially been a reason for users to trust Arbix Finance.
However, today CertiK tweeted that Arbix is now classified as a rugpull after the token's smart contract was detected minting 10 million ARBIX to addresses under the owner's control and then dumping them for Ethereum. The operators of Arbix also moved $10 million in funds deposited by users to "unverified pools," where they were converted to Ethereum. The scammers then transferred the Ethereum to Tornado.cash, which acts as a mixer to make it harder to trace the funds. The funds and their movements are being traced, but the chances of them being recovered are slim at this point.
However, today CertiK tweeted that Arbix is now classified as a rugpull after the token's smart contract was detected minting 10 million ARBIX to addresses under the owner's control and then dumping them for Ethereum. The operators of Arbix also moved $10 million in funds deposited by users to "unverified pools," where they were converted to Ethereum. The scammers then transferred the Ethereum to Tornado.cash, which acts as a mixer to make it harder to trace the funds. The funds and their movements are being traced, but the chances of them being recovered are slim at this point.
No such thing (Score:4, Insightful)
an audited and supposedly trustworthy yield farming platform
There's no such thing as "trustworthy" in the world of finance. Cryptocurrency even less.
Re: No such thing (Score:4, Insightful)
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Science is not a thing you can trust. You can only trust the PEOPLE performing it.
It's like saying "trust the hammer" when a psychotic killer is swinging it at you.
Re: No such thing (Score:2)
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Re: No such thing (Score:4, Insightful)
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But most people who say they "trust Science" are not even trusting Science, they are trusting a person who is saying "this is the science."
I've never seen anyone say "trust the science" in a general sense, but only as a response to some anti-science nutjob who thinks what they read on Facebook trumps a peer reviewed controlled study.
Don't generalise. Science isn't about trusting a person, it's about trusting a large group of people who are experts in their field.
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I've never seen anyone say "trust the science" in a general sense, but only as a response to some anti-science nutjob who thinks what they read on Facebook trumps a peer reviewed controlled study.
Then you don't get out much. Politicians love to use that phrase as a way to justify whatever policies they are pushing while also attempting to shut down opposition.
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Politicians love to use that phrase as a way to justify whatever policies they are pushing while also attempting to shut down opposition.
Ahhh you're talking about people who say trust the science without actually quoting the science. I understand you now. I thought you were talking about COVID and climate change arguments on the internet between intelligent people who trust science and stupid morons.
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Well I'm not the original person you replied to. I just pointed out that the phrase is very common. And in my experience people quoting actual peer reviewed studies don't often use the phrase "trust the science" when quoting them. They say things like, "This peer reviewed study says __". "Trust the science" in my experience is used as a logical fallacy phrase like a form of appeal to authority or appeal to statistics. A claim that your opinion is backed up by some science without actually showing that it i
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To be clear, it wasn't actually audited by auditors. It was "graded" by people who call themselves auditors, which is really different.
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Oh hey it's OMBad trolling, pretending to be the guy who lives rent free in OMBad's head, rsilvergun.
Do me next, OMBad. C'mon, you know you want to.
Re:No such thing (Score:4, Informative)
Aaaand that's why finance is regulated! Unlike "Cryptocurrency".
"Trust but verify" is pretty much "Distrust and verify and verify again" in the financial world.
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Having no government oversight of anything and no taxes is awesome - Just ask anyone living in Somalia.
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I'm not convinced the risk is the same for everyone
That's a pretty good thing to be not convinced of.
It's like an upside down pyramid scheme, with only a few people owning most of it, and a lot of useful idiots cranking up the value of their play money.
Rug pulls and "thefts", all a part of the game.
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On the other hand, the people who drive better cars than us are into crypto. .
The vast majority of people who get into crypto are now taking the bus. For every winner there's 99 losers.
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There is more than crypto to paper trails (Score:4, Interesting)
Apparently this operation had a website and a twitter handle. FBI data subpoena is probably already on the way for those accounts. Running the "money" through a crypto mixer isn't going to be much help when the black coats show up at their door with plyers and a framing hammer.
Best of luck!
Btw, this summary has basic spelling errors. /shrug
exist scams => exit scams
twith => with
I'm sure your heart is pounding in your chest while you frantically type in the hopes of being the very first to spill the news, but editors should probably edit.
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FBI data subpoena is probably already on the way for those accounts.
I think you have an optimistic view of how much the FBI actually cares.
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FBI data subpoena is probably already on the way for those accounts.
but editors should probably edit. /shrug
I think you have an optimistic view of how much the FBI actually cares.
I think you have an optimistic view that /. editors actually edit.
Re: There is more than crypto to paper trails (Score:2)
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Re:There is more than crypto to paper trails (Score:4, Funny)
Apparently this operation had a website and a twitter handle.
And it *still* wasn't legit? Even having both of those things? :-)
Re:There is more than crypto to paper trails (Score:4, Funny)
Sounds like the XKCD crypto-nerd's fantasy meeting reality. [xkcd.com]
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Apparently this operation had a website and a twitter handle. FBI data subpoena is probably already on the way for those accounts.
It had a website AND twitter handle? Well that's that then, it'll be easy as fuck for the FBI to trace them. It's not like you can set those up from anywhere in the world with just a few mouse clicks using a service that obfuscates your real location without any checks on your real identity....
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It had a website AND twitter handle? Well that's that then, it'll be easy as fuck for the FBI to trace them. It's not like you can set those up from anywhere in the world with just a few mouse clicks using a service that obfuscates your real location without any checks on your real identity....
Well, according to that one clown who posts on every thread here, it's completely impossible to get a Twitter account or an email address or a web host without being FULLY TRACKED. Not that he's completely wrong, perhaps we should try convincing a bunch of Big Ad companies that the people behind this scam are really likely to click on a particular sort of toilet paper ad, and they'll have 'em pinpointed to within 5 meters.
In other crypto token news (Score:5, Funny)
In related news, last Wednesday there were no multi-million dollar crypto thefts reported for the day. This marks the first time since April of 2019 there has been a day without a rug pull scam or "hack" of an exchange.
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In that same time period, how many multi-million dollar hard cash thefts were reported? Just curious, since crypto backers keep telling me that fiat is no more legitimate than crypto.
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In related news, last Wednesday there were no multi-million dollar crypto thefts reported for the day. This marks the first time since April of 2019 there has been a day without a rug pull scam or "hack" of an exchange.
Sorry about that. Had something planned for Wednesday, but hard disk died just when I was ready to go.
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last Wednesday there were no multi-million dollar crypto thefts reported for the day.
I think such an extraordinary claim requires proof. citation please!
Rugpull? (Score:2)
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My wife says more like an "assfuck"
Um, just where do you two keep your crypto wallets?
Better to be (Score:2)
Ya but ... (Score:2)
Arbix Finance ... has been flagged as a 'rugpull,' deleting its site, Twitter, and Telegram channel and transferring $10 million worth of deposited cryptocurrency.
At least their crypto-investors, who like sticking it to "the man" by avoiding centralized banking, have the satisfaction of knowing their deposited crypto-funds weren't FDIC insured* like at a bank and they probably won't be getting anything back. I mean, that's something - right?
(*Obviously that insurance doesn't apply to funds invested in the markets, etc...)
Remind me why? (Score:3)
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If bank owners repeatedly took all of the cash out of their banks and shuttered their doors, people would find banks untrustworthy.
That essentially happened over and over and over, and people didn't trust banks, so we created the FDIC. Now we still don't trust banks, but we trust the FDIC.
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Each bank used to issue its own currency, and they had a habit of just shutting down and leaving their depositors in the lurch. Sound familiar?
Drugs and prostitution (Score:2)
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Yeesh! (Score:5, Funny)
Object lessons (Score:3)
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Re:Object lessons (Score:5, Insightful)
Without the platforms there is no way to turn your actual money into imaginary money. Back in the day you could just mine the crypto currency of your choice. You took your hard earned money, and you paid for electricity that turned that actual money into heat and great big numbers that (apparently) were special. These days almost no one mines cryptocurrencies. To get into the crypto market you have to be on some sort of platform. If you want to see the huge returns you can't pick one of the nearly legitimate ones either.
Even worse, absolutely no one buys things with crypto currencies. If you have imaginary money, and you want to turn that imaginary money into goods and services, you have to use one of these platforms to turn your imaginary money into actual money. Once you have real money you can then use this real money purchase things. The people running these platforms probably see this as a feature. They are essentially in the business of taking your actual money, and trading it for some of their imaginary money. This is, unsurprisingly, not what was originally promised. Crypto was originally touted as a decentralized payment system. However, there is almost no real world use of any crypto in this fashion. You can, I have heard, pay to have your personal data unecrypted with bitcoin. I haven't tried this myself, as I am capable of unencrypting my own data. If, however, you find that you have had your data encrypted for you by a professional you might need to transfer some bitcoin to this professional if you want help unencrypting it.
The reality is that many of these crypto platforms don't even support moving your crypto to a local wallet, taking the whole concept to a completely different level. Not only is the money imaginary, but the crypto part is imaginary as well.
On the bright side apparently they are currently having a firesale on ARBIX tokens. It is a real opportunity to get a lot of these tokens for very little actual money. In fact, it appears that you might be able to purchase all of the ARBIX tokens for a very minimal amount of actual money. If that is too expensive for you, then you can also simply create your own crypto currency. Apparently even pets can do this.
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These platforms offer crypto holders the opportunity to earn interest or leverage their holdings.
Deposit Bitcoin or Ethereum and earn interest on it while at the same time using the coin's value as collateral so you can take out a loan, usually in a USD stable coin. Then use that money to pay off a mortgage, buy a car, or leverage up and buy more crypto. Which you then deposit, raising your total collateral.
Now you can use the value in your Bitcoin without having to sell it.
A loan also looks way better fo
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And nothing of value was lost. (Score:2)
Re: Crypto Platform ARBIX Flagged As a Rugpull (Score:1)
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