Hackers try to sell NFT of Belarusian leader
- Belarusian hackers claim to have gained access to the passport information of all citizens
- President Alexander Lukashenko’s information included
- This allows them to stamp an NFT with his passport details
The Belarusian Cyber Partisans, a hoard of hacktivists, have attempted to sell a non-fungible token with what they guarantee is Alexander Lukashenko’s identification data, Cointelegraph noted.
The activity, according to the Belarusian cyber partisans, is part of a grassroots funding campaign to go against ridiculous lawmakers in Minsk and Moscow.
According to Cointelegraph, the collection professes to have access to an administrative data set containing the identification data of every citizen of Belarus, allowing them to present the “Belarisuan Passports” NFT assortment, which includes a computerized visa suspected of including real data about Lukashenko.
Belarusian cyber partisans also revealed their intention to sell NFTs
The drive ignored OpenSea’s strategies about doxxing and uncovering individually identifiable data about someone else without their insight, an organization representative told Gizmodo.
The Belarusian cyber partisans additionally disclosed that they planned to sell NFTs containing the visa information of other senior government officials associated with Lukashenko.
The “Belarus Obstruction Movement” is a major fundraiser that the Belarusian cyber partisans started in February with the expectation of eventually removing Lukashenko using their own self-preservation troops. Gifts to the foundation are usually made through advanced forms of money such as Bitcoin.
As a group’s response to the fear that has been unleashed, they, the free residents of Belarus, structure their self-protection and refuse to bow to this state. The gathering stated that the defeat of authoritarian fascism is our definitive goal.
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Lukashenko is a rather controversial figure
Lukashenko is a remarkably dubious figure and has been in charge of Belarus since the country’s inception in 1994.
Regardless of whether he was elected for the reason of getting rid of impurities, he has been depicted by any semblance of the Organize Crime and Corruption Reporting Project as having firm decisions, pestering pundits and catching and beating dissidents before.
The hacktivists express their passion against what they feel is a bad system under Lukashenko, who has likewise led the rally by way of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
In February, the Belarusian cyber-partisans launched a more extensive fund-raising crusade called the ‘Opposition Movement of Belarus’, which plans to finally usurp influence from Lukashenko through its own powers of self-preservation. The mission basically takes gifts through crypto resources like Bitcoin.