How An NFT Trader Lost $150K Trying to Troll Twitter Bots


    A Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT owned by "Franklin".
    Franklin is an NFT trader with 57 Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs, including this one with gold fur. Golden BAYC NFTs have sold for over $1 million in the past.?
    Yuga Labs
    


    Scams and frauds are ubiquitous in crypto, but sometimes the biggest losses are those people inflict upon themselves. On Wednesday, one NFT trader suffered a spectacular loss of 100 ether, or $150,000, because of a joke gone wrong.?
    “This will be the joke and bag fumble of the century,” tweeted Franklin, a pseudonymous NFT trader known for owning over 50 Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs. “I deserve all of the jokes and criticism.”
    To understand Franklin’s self-inflicted wound, you need to know about Ethereum Name Service. Ethereum wallets are by default 40 characters long — 0x and then 38 random letters and numbers — but ENS allows users to buy a name for their wallet. Instead of an ugly string of characters, my wallet could be CNET.eth. Anyone can mint a new ENS, provided the name isn’t already taken, and they’re owned as NFTs that can then be traded.?
    


    It’s to crypto what domain names are to the internet; crypto traders buy wallet names for their aliases but also buy ENS domains like amazon.eth or nike.eth in the hopes those wallet addresses, like the website domains, will be worth a lot one day. (Porno.eth?sold for $200,000.) There are several “ENS bot” accounts on Twitter, which report notable sales of ENS domains, such as the $90,000 purchase of samsung.eth last week.? ?
    

Well this is the most surprising 1.891 ETH I have ever made. I owe it all to #ENS and @gweiman_eth’s creative idea. #Marketing101 pic.twitter.com/wk6CFBkugx
    — Franklin ???uilding 57 apes (@franklinisbored) July 20, 2022


    

Oh no, I lost 100 ETH. I was celebrating my joke of a domain sale, sharing the spoils, but in a dream of greed, forgot to cancel my own bid of 100 ETH to buy it back. This will be the joke and bag fumble of the century. I deserve all of the jokes and criticism.
    — Franklin ???uilding 57 apes (@franklinisbored) July 20, 2022


    

Franklin I’m so sorry but lmaoooo pic.twitter.com/Q5VdXt3Etf
    — quit.pcc.eth (@0xQuit) July 20, 2022


    

stop-doing-fake-bids-its-honestly-lame-my-guy.eth is now in the top 5 ENS sales of all time. A historical moment.
    — ?????.eth (@address_eth) July 20, 2022


    

Franklin is down 100eth from messing around with bids on ENS

You can say “oh yeah he’s got 50+ apes” but the dude works hard for his assets… genuinely feel for him pic.twitter.com/Q74SQHkghs
    — Mitko?? | web3adventures.eth (@mitkopitko7) July 20, 2022


    On Monday, Franklin tried to amuse himself by getting Twitter bots to report a ludicrous ENS offer. His plan was to crowdsource a silly ENS name from his followers, mint it and then, using another wallet, offer 100 ether ($150,000) on the ENS NFT on OpenSea. He hoped that offer would trigger the ENS bot. Franklin ended up minting “stop-doing-fake-bids-its-honestly-lame-my-guy.eth.” The ploy worked; a few ENS sales bots tweeted out the fake bid.
    After that, though, someone offered Franklin 1.891 ether ($2,890) for the ENS address. Franklin accepted the offer, calling it “the most surprising 1.891 ETH I have ever made.” But he forgot to cancel the 100 ether bid he’d made from his second wallet, meaning the offer was still active. The buyer took advantage, purchasing the ENS address from Franklin for $2,890 — and selling it back to Franklin’s second wallet for $150,000.
    “I was celebrating my joke of a domain sale, sharing the spoils, but in a dream of greed, forgot to cancel my own bid of 100 ETH to buy it back,” Franklin tweeted. “I didn’t get ‘botted.’ I had plenty of time to cancel my offer, I just ran to Twitter, instead.”