Scan to download
BTC $79,001.96 -2.93%
ETH $2,218.23 -3.50%
BNB $672.04 -1.32%
XRP $1.43 -4.24%
SOL $89.16 -3.89%
TRX $0.3515 -0.55%
DOGE $0.1133 -2.91%
ADA $0.2610 -4.39%
BCH $424.86 -2.94%
LINK $10.05 -4.86%
HYPE $43.99 -0.05%
AAVE $92.60 -7.10%
SUI $1.09 -8.65%
XLM $0.1543 -5.85%
ZEC $516.34 -8.15%
BTC $79,001.96 -2.93%
ETH $2,218.23 -3.50%
BNB $672.04 -1.32%
XRP $1.43 -4.24%
SOL $89.16 -3.89%
TRX $0.3515 -0.55%
DOGE $0.1133 -2.91%
ADA $0.2610 -4.39%
BCH $424.86 -2.94%
LINK $10.05 -4.86%
HYPE $43.99 -0.05%
AAVE $92.60 -7.10%
SUI $1.09 -8.65%
XLM $0.1543 -5.85%
ZEC $516.34 -8.15%

Malicious Chrome extensions secretly steal Solana transaction funds

2025-11-27 22:14:49
Collection

According to Cointelegraph, cybersecurity company Socket has discovered a malicious Chrome extension called "Crypto Copilot" that is secretly stealing funds from users' Solana transactions.

The extension allows users to conduct Solana transactions directly from the X social media platform, but it injects additional instructions into each transaction, siphoning off at least 0.0013 SOL or 0.05% of the transaction amount. Unlike typical wallet-draining malware, Crypto Copilot executes transactions using the Raydium decentralized exchange while adding a second instruction to transfer SOL to the attacker's wallet, with the user interface only displaying a transaction summary, hiding the separate operational instructions. Since its release on June 18, 2024, the extension currently has only 15 users. Socket has submitted a takedown request to the Chrome Web Store security team. Security experts warn users that the Chrome extension ecosystem has long been a popular target for cryptocurrency scams due to its large user base and scalable design.

app_icon
ChainCatcher Building the Web3 world with innovations.