Shiba Inu issued a fresh alert as fake SOU NFT airdrop schemes spread quickly, and the warning urged users to verify all links carefully. The team asked victims to claim compensation only on the official portal.
The Shiba Inu team launched the SOU NFT to support victims of the 2025 Shibarium exploit, and scammers quickly built fake claim pages that copied the official portal. Susbarium said fraud groups pushed these links across social channels. Susbarium stated that “the SOU NFT will not arrive by airdrop” and urged users to avoid any shared link that promises automatic rewards, and the group warned that fake sites attempt to capture wallet details.
Fraud operators used shortened links to mislead victims, and they placed cloned domains across multiple platforms. Susbarium said these sites asked users to connect wallets without authorization. The group stressed that victims must only use the official portal at Shib.io, and it reminded users that private keys and seed phrases should stay confidential, and it added that exposing these details can give scammers full access.
Susbarium urged affected users to type the portal address manually, and it encouraged them to confirm each domain before interacting. The channel warned that bad actors updated their tactics often. It said fake dashboards continue to circulate, and it confirmed that the warning will stay active, and it asked users to report new threats when seen.
The team said the claim process remains direct, and it asked victims to open the portal and select the SOU claim option, and the system then checks eligible wallets tied to the 2025 exploit. It stated that users will see the amount owed on-chain, and it said the NFT will represent that value, and the asset can move to supported marketplaces.
The group confirmed that the SOU NFT will not appear automatically, and it repeated that no airdrop will occur, and the team asked victims to rely only on verified instructions. It added that the NFT may be traded or merged, and it said these features depend on marketplace support, and the portal will show each option clearly.
The team published new guidance to maintain clarity, and it said each update will appear on its blog, and it advised victims to monitor official channels. It reminded users that scammers may impersonate support staff, and it urged victims to verify communication sources, and it restated that no staff member will request private keys.
The team said it will release compensation in phases, and it confirmed that the project aims to restore affected users gradually, and it said each stage will follow internal reviews. It added that repayment funds will come from revenue streams, and it mentioned licensing income and ecosystem reserves, and the team said these sources will support long-term stability.
The group said the repayment process will continue as claims progress, and it will update users when new batches open. The team asked victims to check the portal for status changes. It reported that claim numbers increased this week, and it said verification runs automatically on-chain, and the portal will refresh eligible data as needed.
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