It has come to our attention that some members have generated public and private key pairs on phishing sites. Your EOS funds might be compromised!
Our team is working and coordinating with different teams to see how the rights of these users can be safeguarded. You can check your keypairs using this tool. You can also try to check if your key pair is compromised by trying to vote on a trusted voting app.
Please note that you should ask fast: if voting has reached 15% and the chain becomes live, there will be no stopping the phishing sites to sell your EOS.
See screencast here:
Boy Maas from EOS Amsterdam explaining the tool
Public: EOS8HuvjfQeUS7tMdHPPrkTFMnEP7nr6oivvuJyNcvW9Sx5MxJSkZ Private: 5JS9bTWMc52HWmMC8v58hdfePTxPV5dd5fcxq92xUzbfmafeeRo
Public: EOS7pscBeDbJTNn5SNxxowmWwoM7hGj3jDmgxp5KTv7gR89Ny5ii3 Private: 5KgKxmnm8oh5WbHC4jmLARNFdkkgVdZ389rdxwGEiBdAJHkubBH
Public: EOS833HgCT3egUJRDnW5k3BQGqXAEDmoYo6q1s7wWnovn6B9Mb1pd Private: 5JFLPVygcZZdEno2WWWkf3fPriuxnvjtVpkThifYM5HwcKg6ndu
Based on the tool published by WebDigi & EOS Authority