OpenSea will bring in the police to combat NFT thefts
This will prevent users from buying stolen tokens on the platform
11.08.2022 - 14:40
637
2 min
0
What’s new? Representatives of NFT marketplace OpenSea have announced a new policy that will allow for additional measures against the sale of stolen non-fungible tokens. The announcement emphasizes that the rules take into account US laws, where knowingly allowing the sale of stolen items is prohibited. The company said it will not allow the platform to be used for such purposes and will add the use of police reports naming specific NFTs that are better not to be purchased on the marketplace.
1/ Can we address the 🐘 in the room? We want to provide you more clarity and transparency around our stolen items policy ↯— OpenSea (@opensea) August 10, 2022
Why did the platform change its policy? Platform representatives acknowledged that in some cases, customers who unknowingly bought stolen tokens were punished. In response to this, as well as negative feedback from the NFT community, the marketplace changed its policy by expanding the use of police reports. OpenSea said that information from them will now be used not only within the platform when resolving escalated disputes, but also to confirm all claims of theft. This will prevent users from buying stolen NFTs.
The company stressed that they are exploring other ways to solve the problem. In particular, they are working on automating threat and theft detection.
According to analysts at Comparitech, attackers have stolen $86,68 million in NFTs since the beginning of 2020. Today, the tokens are estimated to be worth more than $896,5 million. There were a total of 166 thefts during that period, with 2 committed in 2020, 14 in 2021, and the remaining 150 recorded in the first half of 2022.
Useful material?
Incidents
The company is linking the incident to a compromised private key on a service wallet, rather than a smart contract exploit
May 22, 2026
Incidents
Following the incident, the project temporarily halted trading operations and node activity.
May 15, 2026
Incidents
The user spent weeks unsuccessfully trying to guess the password until Claude helped find an old wallet backup file
May 14, 2026
Crypto regulations
Authorities are introducing mandatory registration for companies handling cross-border crypto transactions
May 8, 2026
Incidents
According to Blockaid, the attack may have been carried out by the same hacker behind the 1inch Fusion V1 exploit.
May 7, 2026
Incidents
The attacker gained administrative access and altered contracts to drain user funds
Apr 30, 2026
Telegram
Twitter