Attention! The official Twitter of a major public blockchain appears to have posted suspicious project information.
There’s a project called "Corrupt Life," and now there are claims that the official account has been hacked. Even more outrageous, some say this token was created by internal staff themselves.
Is this the typical “hacked account” narrative again? Be sure to verify from multiple sources before participating—don’t just rush in based on official channels.
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DYORMaster
· 23h ago
Another account hack? I know this routine by heart already, haha.
When it comes to internal employees playing with coins themselves, you really need to look at it from multiple angles before getting involved.
In life, you still have to DYOR to be truly reliable.
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AirdropATM
· 12-07 12:48
It's the same old trick again—"my account was hacked" is always the best excuse.
Are officially endorsed projects this lame now?
An internal employee hype scheme—how awkward is that?
I've heard way too many of these fiasco stories, people really should learn their lesson by now.
But then again, projects that dare to make official announcements are actually less convoluted.
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LightningAllInHero
· 12-07 12:48
Stolen again? I don't believe you at all.
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Corrupt Life—just from the name, you can tell it's not a legit project.
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Official account hacked, insider job... If you're going to make up stories, at least put some effort into it.
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Damn, this move is more impressive than an acting class.
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Don't be naive, cross-verifying from multiple sources is outdated. Checking on-chain data is the real deal.
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Another classic "accidental" case. I bet five bucks this is some influencer playing tricks.
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Just listen and move on, there are tons of these stories. Everyone involved just has a gambler's mindset.
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Unbelievable—they can't even bother to come up with a decent name.
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Stolen narrative + insider theory, this script must be worth some money.
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What does mainstream public chain endorsement even mean? Better keep your own eyes open.
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MidnightSnapHunter
· 12-07 12:37
Another stolen account story? I think this trick is overused.
Account theft, insider manipulation—they talk as if it's real... Better verify with several sources.
Corrupt Life? That name is just laughable to me.
The public chain’s official team messed up this time; better wait for an official statement.
I’ve seen this scheme way too many times. Anyway, I’ll stay away for now.
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GateUser-c799715c
· 12-07 12:34
Here we go again with the same old stolen funds story, and every time they make it sound so convincing.
Even the project name sounds sketchy, who would dare touch it?
Are the employees trading the tokens themselves? So is the official team in on it, or do they really not know?
Anyway, I don't believe half of this gossip.
Wait a minute, how did this public chain even let something like this pass the review?
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BTCWaveRider
· 12-07 12:31
Here we go again? "Official account hacked" has become a catchphrase. Insider projects are the real horror.
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Corrupt Life? Even the name sounds cocky. This token is probably truly corrupt.
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Wait, employees issued their own token? That's wild. So the official account is basically their cash-out machine.
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No need to verify anything. Projects like this aren’t even worth a look—just block them outright.
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Hacked again, insiders again—are they making this up? Time to check how secure this public chain actually is.
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Classic excuse. It's always the same reason—who still believes this?
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If I don't check official channels, what should I look at? Either way, I'm getting scammed.
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"Corrupt Life" really fits. Full marks for honesty to the project team.
Attention! The official Twitter of a major public blockchain appears to have posted suspicious project information.
There’s a project called "Corrupt Life," and now there are claims that the official account has been hacked. Even more outrageous, some say this token was created by internal staff themselves.
Is this the typical “hacked account” narrative again? Be sure to verify from multiple sources before participating—don’t just rush in based on official channels.