cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/37902936

For anybody wondering what is going on with $CANCER live stream… my life was saved for whole 24 hours untill someone tuned in my stream and got me to download verified game on Steam

After this I was drained for over 32,000$ USD of my creator fees earned on pumpdotfun and everything quickly changed. I can’t breathe, I can’t think, im completely lost on what is going to happen next, can’t shake the feeling that it is my fault that I might end up on street again or not have anything to eat in few days… my heart wants to jump out of my mouth and it hurts.

I won’t rewatch this myself but I have added a clip from the stream after I noticed what has happened.

also I have succesfully (CTOed) my creator rewards and they have been redirected to safe device.

Source: rastaland.TV on X/TwitterPrivate front-end.

More context:

Yesterday a video game streamer named rastalandTV inadvertently livestreamed themselves being a victim of a cryptodraining campaign.

This particular spearphishing campaign is extraordinarily heinous because RastaLand is suffering from Stage-4 Sarcoma and is actively seeking donations for their cancer treatment. They lost $30,000 of the money which was designated for their cancer treatment. In the steam clip their friend tries to console them while they cry out, “I am broken now.”

They were contacted by an unknown person who requested they play their video game demo (downloadable from Steam). In exchange for RastaLand playing their video game demo on stream, they would financially compensate them.

Unfortunately, the Steam game was actually a cryptodrainer masquerading as a legitimate video game.

Video.

Source: vx-underground on X/TwitterPrivate front-end.

Source: ZachXBT on X/TwitterPrivate front-end.

Rastaland GoFundMe.

Comments
  • fuzzywombat@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    People keep saying $32k was stolen by malware. No, that did not happen. Malware did not reach into someone’s bank account and withdrew $32k. Here is a simple fact. Crypto is not money. If your brain says something like “it works just like money, or it’s worth just as much as money so it’s basically money” then you’re most likely to get scammed at sometime in the future by putting your actual real money into crypto. It’s that simple.

    • Sonalder@lemmy.ml
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      4 hours ago

      Then what is money? State approved piece of paper backed by oil, weapons, war and slavery?

    • winkerjadams@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      12 hours ago

      If a collective of people say its worth something then it’s worth something. That’s literally what money is and how it works

      • TheObviousSolution@lemmy.ca
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        6 hours ago

        Trust and regulations that are lacking in crypto make it what it is. If a collective of people are willing to offer something in exchange for something else, even just because it is a crowdsourced confidence scam, it doesn’t really ethically exonerate what you are supporting. Every person who participates in crypto is also holding up its underground international market. It was bad enough under normal markets, but the difference is between night and day with crypto. Crypto is far too easy to turn into a bunch of excuses and anonymous pseudonyms.

          • TheObviousSolution@lemmy.ca
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            3 minutes ago

            Only because the trade power of US dollars is like 10000madeupbagillionzillioninternetnumber0000 order of magnitude more. Talk in fractions. Preferably in not also made up ones. I know, I know, crypto habits die hard.

      • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        Isnt the difference that money is valued against something tangible. Like gold, oil or data. The strength of a countries currency is based on how much of these things it has.

        Whereas crypto isn’t valued against anything other than thoughts and prayers. If people think it has value then it has value. Until people no longer think it does, at which point it tanks and you are no longer rich. It’s the same as those NFTs.

        Sure you can make money in crypto, you can exchange it for traditional money if you play the game well. But that doesnt mean crypto has any inherent value.

        • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          5 hours ago

          The USD is backed only by the “full faith and credit of the United States government”. Nothing tangible whatsoever. It’s fiat.

        • Sonalder@lemmy.ml
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          4 hours ago

          1 USD is worth 1 USD because you can pay 1 USD of taxes. It is backed by political promises, oil, weapons and war. This can’t end well.

          Crypto means cryptography. Cryptocurrencies are a variety of things from stablecoin (digital token backed by fiat money often by a private company ), company shares, community projects, scams, scams, ponzi, scams, cool technical experiments and technically bad experiment. In the other hand there is Bitcoin (and Monero to some extent) that is owned by humanity, no foundation, no company, no state. It is backed by a proof of past energy brining the most innovative security system in the history of IT, not based on restricted access and opacity but by economical incentive to play fair with others in a big game theory peer-to-peer network.

          Bitcoin is not the money of the internet. It’s the internet of money.

          Andreas Antonopoulos

        • ogy@lemmy.zip
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          11 hours ago

          No. It used to be fixed against a physical asset but it hasn’t been for a long time now.

        • mathemachristian [he/him]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          11 hours ago

          data
          tangible

          in that case money itself is tangible and can be valued against itself. You are confusing exchange value and use value. Money has an exchange value, so does gold, oil or any other commodity. But unlike money they also have a use value.

        • HereIAm@lemmy.world
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          11 hours ago

          Most currencies today are fiat currency. They only got value because they are the official currency of a nation and their government says so and people have the belief it has value. The US dollar used to be backed by gold but was stopped in the 70’s.

      • Lumisal@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        A form of relatively stable currency that is accepted to have value for the trade of goods and services by the majority of locations.

        Memecoins from pump fun that are less stable than Trump’s mood and vent be used to buy pretty much anything are definitely not that

        • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          5 hours ago

          So would you consider a stable coin like USDC (fully backed by USD, and audited) to be “money” then?

          • Lumisal@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Do the majority of locations that offer goods and services accept USDC in it’s designated region? Can you buy groceries at basically anywhere with it, watch a movie, pay for a gym subscription etc with it? Can you buy a home or other shelter with it?

            If no, then no, I don’t, since it didn’t meet that criteria.

            Edit: also, what’s the point of USDC, at least based on your description? Sounds it’s just using more resources to do the same thing a debt card does.

        • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          By that definition the Argentinian Peso is not money because it’s not stable, nor is the dollar since the majority of stores in the world don’t accept it (mostly just the ones in the USA do, and a couple of others here and there, but definitely not the majority worldwide). And if you’re going to start randomly limiting locations, I’m fairly confident you can find a specific neighborhood or city where more stores accept Bitcoin than dollars, and worldwide I’m fairly confident more stores accept Bitcoin than Tuvaluan dollar, does that mean that that is not money?

          • Lumisal@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            You crypto heads always bring up the Argentinian Peso even though it’s still actually more stable than even Bitcoin. People aren’t buying Argentinian Pesos thinking they might become rich one day, because it’s an actual currency, not a speculative asset, which is what crypto is. It won’t spike in value over 3 months or dive off a cliff by multitudes of thousands. I guess if you’re a 300 year old vampire or a Galapagos tortoise it’s not stable to you, but a currency having a crash but then staying at a crashed value, over the course of decades, is in fact stability. Having crashes and spikes over months if not weeks is not stability.

            But ignoring that, most of the world does actually accept US dollars - it’s the most traded currency in the world. It’s also safe to say in nearly every country you can probably exchange USD to the local currency fairly easily.

            If you can find me a city where more stores accept Bitcoin rather than the designated currency, then sure. I’m not sure a single one exists.

            And that’s bitcoin, which actually is well known and traded. What the person in the article lost wasn’t even that, not any other well known crypto like Ethereum.