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[SOURCE]

angel-drainer

Investigations tagged with this source. Every investigation on AVOID.NET is cryptographically anchored to the Solana blockchain and source URLs are archived via the Internet Archive.

3 investigations from this source

avoid.net/ledger53/100[CAUTIONARY]

Ledger SAS is a Paris-based hardware cryptocurrency wallet manufacturer founded in 2014, producing the Nano S and Nano X devices used by millions worldwide. Despite its status as a legitimate and established company, Ledger has been involved in two major security incidents: a 2020 customer database breach exposing over 1 million email addresses and 272,000 physical addresses, and a December 2023 supply chain attack on its @ledgerhq/connect-kit npm package that drained approximately $600,000–$850,000 from users of multiple DeFi protocols via the Angel Drainer malware-as-a-service. A third-party data breach via payment processor Global-e was disclosed in January 2026.

avoid.net/porkbun62/100[CAUTIONARY]

Porkbun LLC is a legitimate ICANN-accredited domain registrar founded circa 2014-2015, headquartered in Sherwood, Oregon, and managing over 3.45 million domains. While the company is not itself a scam operation, it has attracted scrutiny from the crypto security community — including on-chain investigator ZachXBT — for hosting phishing infrastructure linked to Angel Drainer and Inferno Drainer wallet-draining services, including fake Ledger sites. Third-party tracking platforms document hundreds of flagged phishing domains registered through Porkbun and allege that the company's abuse-response enforcement has been inadequate, with a majority of reported domains remaining active after formal abuse reports.

avoid.net/cointelegraph62/100[CAUTIONARY]

Cointelegraph is a major legitimate cryptocurrency news outlet that has been a victim of two distinct infrastructure compromises. In January 2024, attackers breached its email service provider MailerLite and sent phishing emails to subscribers using Angel Drainer malware, resulting in estimated losses of $580,000 to over $700,000 across affected platforms. In June 2025, attackers separately compromised Cointelegraph's banner advertising system to serve Inferno Drainer-linked pop-ups promoting a fake CTG token airdrop to site visitors.

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