If you wake up to extra funds in one of your crypto portfolios. here is what to do next and why?
📌 What is a Dust Attack or Airdrop Scam?
A dust attack (or fake airdrop) is when someone sends you crypto either a tiny amount or a big flashy amount without you asking for it. • The goal is to trick you into interacting with it. • Sometimes they’re trying to trace your wallet (with small “dust”). • But often, especially with big fake airdrops, they want you to click, swap, stake, or claim so they can get you to sign a malicious smart contract.
⚠️ Why It’s Dangerous • The balance you see ($247,000 in PUFFER) is almost always fake the token has no real liquidity. • The second you try to swap it or send it, you might be asked to approve a hidden contract. • If you sign that approval, the attacker could get full access to your wallet.
🚨 Once you approve a malicious contract, hackers can wipe your account clean — your entire portfolio could drop to ZERO in seconds.
✅ What You Should Do
✔️ Do NOT swap, send, stake, or “claim more.” ✔️ Do NOT connect your wallet to random sites that promise to help you “cash it out.” ✔️ Hide the token in your wallet app if possible. ✔️ If you ever interacted with it, immediately check for malicious approvals using tools like Revoke.cash (Ethereum) or Solscan (Solana) and revoke anything suspicious.
🔒 Key Takeaway
If you didn’t buy it it’s bait. Never interact. One wrong click or approval could leave you with zero in your wallet. Hackers use these fake airdrops to drain entire portfolios.
When in doubt ignore, hide, and move your real assets to a fresh wallet if you feel unsafe.
Disclaimer: Includes third-party opinions. No financial advice. May include sponsored content.See T&Cs.