TechFlow News — On February 21, according to an official announcement, OpenSea is still actively investigating the specific details of the previous phishing attack. While the exact source has not yet been identified, some EOD updates have been released: the list of affected individuals has been narrowed down to 17 people, rather than the previously mentioned 32. The initial count included anyone who had "interacted" with the attacker, not necessarily victims of the phishing attack. This attack appears inactive, with no malicious contract activity observed for over 15 hours. As previously reported by DooNews, on February 20, OpenSea co-founder and CEO Devin Finzer responded to the "OpenSea vulnerability" incident, stating that this was a phishing attack and the team believes the attack itself is unrelated to the OpenSea website. So far, a total of 32 users signed malicious transactions from the attacker, resulting in some of their NFTs being stolen. Currently, the attack does not appear to be active, with no malicious activity seen from the attacker's account within the past two hours, and some NFTs have already been returned.





