Hackers who breached Discord’s Zendesk support system are reportedly extorting the platform after stealing 2.1 million users’ age-verification photos. Discord is reportedly being extorted by hackers responsible for breaching a database containing the sensitive age verification data of more than 2.1 million users, who are threatening to leak it. In a Wednesday X post, malware repository VX-Underground claimed Discord is being extorted by the individuals responsible for compromising their Zendesk instance, which contains user data. The data includes 2,185,151 photos used for the age verification of 2.1 million users, including pictures of driver’s licenses and passports. “Discord users drivers license and/or passport might be leaked, “ VX-Underground said. Read more
An X user known as Princess Hypio said they lost $170,000 in crypto and NFTs to a scammer who infiltrated a Discord server and pretended to have mutual friends. Update Sept.1, 11:30 pm UTC: This article has been updated to include information from Halborn’s chief information security officer. Last month, crypto user and NFT artist Princess Hypio told her followers she lost $170,000 in crypto and non-fungible tokens after a scammer convinced her to play a game with them on Steam. While she was “mindlessly” playing with the scammer, they were secretly stealing her funds and hacking her Discord. The same tactic was used on three of her other friends, she wrote in a post on Aug. 21 on X. Read more
Hype moves fast, but real crypto innovation is quieter. Use GitHub, Discord and X to spot legitimate projects before they moon or rug. Real crypto projects show consistent GitHub activity, open development and active contributors, not abandoned repos or marketing fluff. Discord can reveal a project’s true momentum through developer interaction, roadmap updates and community-led feedback. X offers direct access to protocol founders and devs; follow conversations, not influencers, to catch real signals early. Read more
An unknown attacker hacked into a moderator’s account and used a bot to share phishing links and steal user funds. Hardware wallet provider Ledger has confirmed its Discord server is secure again after an attacker compromised a moderator’s account to post scam links on May 11 to trick users into revealing their seed phrases on a third-party website. “One of our contracted moderators had their account compromised, which allowed a malicious bot to post scam links in one channel,” Ledger team member Quintin Boatwright wrote on the Ledger Discord server. Some members in Ledger’s Discord channel claimed the attacker abused moderator privileges to ban and mute them as they tried to report the breach, possibly slowing Ledger’s reaction. Read more