#nft #binance #opensea #btc #Ethereum

1. A fraudulent buyer shows interest in your NFT collection.

2. The fraudulent buyer tells you they want to invest 4 to 10 ETH.

3. The fraudulent buyer tells you that your NFTs need to be validated.

4. The fraudulent buyer requests a DISCORD conversation with an OPENSEA NFT operator (in this case) to validate your NFTs.

5. The fraudulent buyer invites a fake OPENSEA validator.

6. The fraudulent OPENSEA operator tells you that, in order to validate, you and the fraudulent buyer must pay a validation fee.

7. The fraudulent OPENSEA operator warns you that your OPENSEA account has been temporarily blocked due to a hacking attempt, and they demand more money to unlock your compromised account.

8. The fraudulent OPENSEA operator tells you that your account has been unlocked.

9. The fraudulent OPENSEA operator now tells you that your NFTs are compromised and need to be validated, and they demand more money to validate them.

When you've spent some of the money and you don't have any more, the fraudulent buyer tells you that nothing's wrong, that the entire process is normal, but he also asks you how much money you have to help cancel the validation, and at that moment you do the rest and you're left with nothing.

TIPS

1. If the minting platform allows you to upload your NFTs, they are already validated.

2. No platform will contact you directly to validate them.

3. If you meet the platform's requirements, you are already accepted and validated.

4. Any buyer can purchase directly on the platform. "YOU ARE ALREADY VALIDATED."

5. Never transfer funds to third-party accounts you don't know.