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It's always the typos...
Back in his hotel room, Halliburton triggered a small test transaction using his new Atomic Wallet address. Then he wiped and reinstated the wallet using the private credentials—the seed phrase—generated when he first downloaded the app, to make sure that it functioned as expected. “Had to take some security measures but almost ready. Thanks for your patience,” wrote Halliburton in a WhatsApp message to Even. “No worries take your time,” Even responded.
At 10:45 pm, satisfied with his tests, Halliburton signaled to a colleague to release $220,000 worth of bitcoin to the Atomic Wallet address. When it arrived, he sent a screenshot of the updated balance to Even. One minute later, Even wrote back, “Thank yiu [sic].”
Lots of scammers out there folks, stay frosty.
102 sats \ 2 replies \ @optimism 7h
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100 sats \ 1 reply \ @Scoresby OP 6h
Seems like I could make a rule of this: anyone who demands you install specific software to do generic things is a scammer.
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YES!
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