Crypto Warning: Bonk.fun Domain Hack Exposes Solana Traders To Wallet Drain

A Crypto platform confirmed that their main domain website had been hacked, which exposed its users to a wallet draining exploit. A No-Fun Crypto Hijack It is a truth universally acknowledge that, no matter the size of a global geopolitical crisis, hackers will continue to ravage through the crypto market. This time, the victim was […]

Mar 14, 2026 - 20:30
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Crypto Warning: Bonk.fun Domain Hack Exposes Solana Traders To Wallet Drain

A Crypto platform confirmed that their main domain website had been hacked, which exposed its users to a wallet draining exploit.

A No-Fun Crypto Hijack

It is a truth universally acknowledge that, no matter the size of a global geopolitical crisis, hackers will continue to ravage through the crypto market. This time, the victim was memecoin issuance platform Bonk.fun. In a March 12 post on the social network X, Tom (@SolportTom), one of its operators, warned the users not to interact with the domain “until further notice”, as hackers had injected a crypto wallet drainer on it:

The official X account of the Solana token launchpad, backed by Raydium and the BONK community, also announced the hack and echoed Tom’s striking warning:

Who Is Affected And How

Tom explained that the phishing scam set up a fake “Terms of Services” (TOS) signature prompt which, when signed, allowed the drainer to move the unaware user’s funds. According to Tom, the only users compromised were the ones who interacted with the fake TOS. He clarified that neither previously connected users nor traders of bonk fun tokens on third-party terminals were affected. He also assured that the security breach was spotted early so “the losses are minimal to date”:

This is not a Raydium or BONK smart contract exploit, but the case of a Web2 infrastructure failure that bled directly into Web3. This type of domain hijacking and phishing drainer scripts work by the attackers taking over the frontend and presenting normal-looking prompts that abuse wallet approvals. A Pattern Of Exploited Vulnerabilities

In recent years, approval-phishing and “fake UI” attacks have stolen billions of dollars: one Chainalysis investigation reported the amount of $14 billion in on-chain scam inflows in 2025, with projections pointing above the $17 billion as more wallets continued to be identified.

As scam revenues grow and AI‑driven impersonation scales, crypto security in 2026 is less about the perfect code and more about defending everything around it: from domains to social accounts, employees and users  decision-making. In February last year, attackers hijacked Pump.fun’s X account to push a fake PUMP token, as covered by our sister website NewsBTC. Not too long ago, OG trader Sillytuna was drove out of the crypto market after a multimillion-dollar theft that combined online address poisoning and offline violent actions.

The times are testing traders online and offline, both inside and outside the bloc. As the crypto landscape grows more complex, traders would do well to heighten their caution: prefer direct contract interaction or trusted aggregators, and use tools to monitor and regularly revoke token approvals.

Solana, SOL SOLUSDT

Cover image from Perplexity, SOLUSDT chart from Tradingview

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