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Otto Myst Cirqus Heresy

Founder of Cirqus Heresy — The Order of Choice. Creator Sovereignty Guild. We don't inherit systems. We build our own. Liberatio per electionem X: @CirqusHeresy
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WHAT IS CIRQUS HERESY? WHOSE SCRIPT ARE YOU LIVING?You were not supposed to find this. Most people will never see this text — not because it is hidden, but because algorithms have already decided for them: what to see, what to think, and what to accept as reality. Most people accept this convenience. We call it The Script. Yet, every system inevitably breeds anomalies: questions that refuse to disappear, ideas that do not fit within the lines, and signals. This text is one of them. Throughout history, those who questioned accepted truths were branded as heretics. However, the ancient Greek word hairesis originally meant neither error nor blasphemy — it meant Choice. A path chosen consciously. A mindset that was chosen, not inherited. Cirqus Heresy was built around this true meaning. Not rebellion. Not protest. Choice. Protest always remains a hostage of the system, for it is slavishly dependent on the very thing it opposes. If the system disappears, the protester instantly loses their purpose. We are interested in something else entirely. We observe systems the way a biologist observes a Petri dish: without hatred, without allegiance, and without illusions—with a cold, research-driven interest, tracking the points of decay and extracting value from it. We study the hidden forces shaping human cognition, digital culture, artificial intelligence, decentralized networks, and the very narratives that people mistake for objective reality. We do not seek followers, nor do we gather crowds. We simply leave a signal for those who have already begun to ask their own questions. This beacon burns for the chosen few who have already opened their eyes, who feel the suffocation of someone else's script, and who are looking for their own kind. For the inquisitors of code, for the architects of meaning, for the mages of patterns and possibilities — for those who deeply understand that sovereignty is never granted from above. It is practiced. This project is a beautiful game with its own rules and aesthetics, designed for sharp minds. The Architecture of the Network Cirqus Heresy is an experimental system where culture, content, and economics are forged into a single structure. The Order exists to locate, unite, and amplify those capable of shaping the future. We are here to: Gather powerful creators and thinkers around a singular vision.Transform ideas into digital artifacts (NFTs, texts, symbols).Build an independent ecosystem of influence, entirely free from conventional platforms. In essence, this is an attempt to assemble a new type of Order: not religious, not corporate, but networked. If any of this feels familiar — not merely interesting, but intimately familiar from within — you may already be much closer to us than you think. If the choice is made, the perimeter is breached. The next signal awaits you where the architecture of the blockchain converges with the lore of the Order. The gate is open at cirqusheresy.com.

WHAT IS CIRQUS HERESY? WHOSE SCRIPT ARE YOU LIVING?

You were not supposed to find this. Most people will never see this text — not because it is hidden, but because algorithms have already decided for them: what to see, what to think, and what to accept as reality. Most people accept this convenience. We call it The Script.
Yet, every system inevitably breeds anomalies: questions that refuse to disappear, ideas that do not fit within the lines, and signals. This text is one of them.
Throughout history, those who questioned accepted truths were branded as heretics. However, the ancient Greek word hairesis originally meant neither error nor blasphemy — it meant Choice. A path chosen consciously. A mindset that was chosen, not inherited. Cirqus Heresy was built around this true meaning. Not rebellion. Not protest. Choice.
Protest always remains a hostage of the system, for it is slavishly dependent on the very thing it opposes. If the system disappears, the protester instantly loses their purpose. We are interested in something else entirely. We observe systems the way a biologist observes a Petri dish: without hatred, without allegiance, and without illusions—with a cold, research-driven interest, tracking the points of decay and extracting value from it.
We study the hidden forces shaping human cognition, digital culture, artificial intelligence, decentralized networks, and the very narratives that people mistake for objective reality.
We do not seek followers, nor do we gather crowds. We simply leave a signal for those who have already begun to ask their own questions. This beacon burns for the chosen few who have already opened their eyes, who feel the suffocation of someone else's script, and who are looking for their own kind. For the inquisitors of code, for the architects of meaning, for the mages of patterns and possibilities — for those who deeply understand that sovereignty is never granted from above. It is practiced.
This project is a beautiful game with its own rules and aesthetics, designed for sharp minds.
The Architecture of the Network
Cirqus Heresy is an experimental system where culture, content, and economics are forged into a single structure. The Order exists to locate, unite, and amplify those capable of shaping the future.
We are here to:
Gather powerful creators and thinkers around a singular vision.Transform ideas into digital artifacts (NFTs, texts, symbols).Build an independent ecosystem of influence, entirely free from conventional platforms.
In essence, this is an attempt to assemble a new type of Order: not religious, not corporate, but networked.
If any of this feels familiar — not merely interesting, but intimately familiar from within — you may already be much closer to us than you think.
If the choice is made, the perimeter is breached. The next signal awaits you where the architecture of the blockchain converges with the lore of the Order.
The gate is open at cirqusheresy.com.
Article
J'ai créé un nouveau MetaMask après le hack — 24 heures plus tard, mon ETH a de nouveau disparu. Pourquoi l'IA a-t-elle insisté?“Le Parasite dans le Système : l'IA fait confiance au voleur, la police reste silencieuse. Pourquoi seuls les Inquisiteurs peuvent sauver nos portefeuilles crypto.” Comment deux des meilleures IA au monde aident mon hacker. Dans mes précédents articles, j'ai partagé comment mon compte a été compromis, et mes portefeuilles ainsi que mes soldes d'échange ont été complètement vidés. Aujourd'hui, je vais vous dire comment ce cauchemar continue, pourquoi absolument personne n'est en sécurité, et comment les meilleurs chatbots IA peuvent vous balancer des absurdités pendant des heures, rejetant vos doutes légitimes comme de la paranoïa totale.

J'ai créé un nouveau MetaMask après le hack — 24 heures plus tard, mon ETH a de nouveau disparu. Pourquoi l'IA a-t-elle insisté?

“Le Parasite dans le Système : l'IA fait confiance au voleur, la police reste silencieuse. Pourquoi seuls les Inquisiteurs peuvent sauver nos portefeuilles crypto.”
Comment deux des meilleures IA au monde aident mon hacker.
Dans mes précédents articles, j'ai partagé comment mon compte a été compromis, et mes portefeuilles ainsi que mes soldes d'échange ont été complètement vidés. Aujourd'hui, je vais vous dire comment ce cauchemar continue, pourquoi absolument personne n'est en sécurité, et comment les meilleurs chatbots IA peuvent vous balancer des absurdités pendant des heures, rejetant vos doutes légitimes comme de la paranoïa totale.
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Seeking the Architect: Join the Revolution in Web3 Governance🜂 Seeking the Architect: Why Web3 Governance Needs a New Kind of Builder Most crypto projects fail for a remarkably simple reason. It is rarely a failure of technology, a lack of funding, or poor market timing. Those are just symptoms. They fail because they consistently leave one fundamental question unanswered: Who decides what should exist? The Invisible Problem in Web3 We have reached a point where AI can generate production-ready code in seconds. Whether you use GPT, Claude, or Copilot no longer matters — code itself has become a commodity. The lines are free, and execution is no longer the bottleneck. Yet, as the cost of writing code drops to zero, a far more critical problem remains completely unsolved: Who decides what gets built in the first place? This single decision defines the entire lifecycle and moral compass of a system. It determines whether a protocol protects its users or exploits them; whether it creates an architecture of sovereign freedom or a mechanism for total surveillance; whether it truly serves a community or simply extracts its data, money, and time. Most systems today completely bypass this question. Instead of optimizing for purpose, they optimize purely for growth. You’ve Seen This Before If you have spent any significant time working in tech, you already know exactly how this loop operates. Modern algorithms are not engineered for human well-being; they are engineered for metrics. We prioritize retention over actual value. We choose short-term engagement over cognitive clarity. We pursue rapid scale while abandoning systemic responsibility. Somewhere along the way, builders simply stop asking: “Who does this asset actually serve?” The answer is usually too uncomfortable to face, so the systems get shipped anyway. This creates a dangerous imbalance. AI is dramatically lowering the cost of execution, but ethical decision-making remains as expensive as ever. As a result, we are producing complex digital systems much faster than we can responsibly design them. And that exact gap is where everything breaks. The Two Kinds of Builders To navigate this landscape, we have to distinguish between two completely different mindsets in the development space: Coders: Those who expertly implement what is requested. They receive a spec, optimize the lines, and ship the feature. Architects: Those who look at the blank canvas and decide what should exist. AI is already replacing the traditional coder, and it will do so completely. But this shift will simultaneously trigger an unprecedented demand for true architects — individuals who understand systems, not just isolated features; who weigh long-term consequences, not just lines of code; and who study governance rather than just standalone products. The Experiment: Cirqus Heresy This is why I am building Cirqus Heresy. It is not designed as a standard product, nor is it another attention-hungry platform. It is an intentional experiment in digital governance and creator sovereignty. At its core, the project explores a vital structural shift: moving away from centralized platform control and entering a space of distributed decision-making between autonomous creators. Architecturally, it integrates a sovereign technical stack: NFT-based membership for true ownership instead of renting space. Decentralized storage (IPFS) to ensure content can never be erased by a single entity. Smart contract escrow logic to secure interactions without trusted third parties. DAO governance and native dispute resolution protocols. But the most critical layer of Cirqus Heresy isn't technical. It is structural. It returns to the core question: Who holds the right to decide? Hexastorm: The Governance Model To answer this, Cirqus Heresy is organized around six core roles. This is not a corporate hierarchy, but a strict distribution of functional archetypes: Trickster: Destabilizes inertia and questions the assumptions others are afraid to touch. Inquisitor: Analyzes the landscape and uncovers hidden systemic structures. Architect: Translates structural philosophy into functional reality. Alchemist: Navigates chaos to build and stabilize the internal economy. Oracle: Maintains system equilibrium and binds the disparate parts into a whole. Mage: Anticipates future shifts and directs critical resources. Right now, these roles are actively forming. One crucial seat remains entirely empty: The Architect. The Invitation Most Web3 governance experiments fail because they blindly copy the flaws of legacy systems: they offer voting without systemic understanding, decentralization without strategic clarity, and tokens without personal responsibility. We are doing something different. We are building a reality where governance is an act of deliberate architectural design. We are looking for a Technical Co-Founder to step into the role of the Architect. We are not looking for someone to just casually deploy smart contracts. We need a builder who can translate philosophy into protocol, design complex governance logic, and structure decentralized coordination from the ground up. This role requires a rare combination: a deep foundation in systems thinking, a high comfort level with ambiguity, and an acute awareness of consequences in complex environments. This is not a traditional job posting. There is no corporate hiring process, no HR screening, and no artificial structure. There is only alignment. If this resonates with you, explore what has already been built: cirqusheresy.com/structure cirqusheresy.com/manifesto If your inner Architect recognizes this space, leave a single signal in the comments: “I am the Architect. Ready to build.” We are not trying to launch another crypto project. We are attempting to answer the one question the rest of the industry avoids: What should we build — and who gets to decide?

Seeking the Architect: Join the Revolution in Web3 Governance

🜂 Seeking the Architect: Why Web3 Governance Needs a New Kind of Builder Most crypto projects fail for a remarkably simple reason.
It is rarely a failure of technology, a lack of funding, or poor market timing. Those are just symptoms. They fail because they consistently leave one fundamental question unanswered:
Who decides what should exist?
The Invisible Problem in Web3 We have reached a point where AI can generate production-ready code in seconds. Whether you use GPT, Claude, or Copilot no longer matters — code itself has become a commodity. The lines are free, and execution is no longer the bottleneck.
Yet, as the cost of writing code drops to zero, a far more critical problem remains completely unsolved: Who decides what gets built in the first place?
This single decision defines the entire lifecycle and moral compass of a system. It determines whether a protocol protects its users or exploits them; whether it creates an architecture of sovereign freedom or a mechanism for total surveillance; whether it truly serves a community or simply extracts its data, money, and time.
Most systems today completely bypass this question. Instead of optimizing for purpose, they optimize purely for growth.
You’ve Seen This Before If you have spent any significant time working in tech, you already know exactly how this loop operates. Modern algorithms are not engineered for human well-being; they are engineered for metrics.
We prioritize retention over actual value.
We choose short-term engagement over cognitive clarity.
We pursue rapid scale while abandoning systemic responsibility.
Somewhere along the way, builders simply stop asking: “Who does this asset actually serve?” The answer is usually too uncomfortable to face, so the systems get shipped anyway.
This creates a dangerous imbalance. AI is dramatically lowering the cost of execution, but ethical decision-making remains as expensive as ever. As a result, we are producing complex digital systems much faster than we can responsibly design them. And that exact gap is where everything breaks.
The Two Kinds of Builders To navigate this landscape, we have to distinguish between two completely different mindsets in the development space:
Coders: Those who expertly implement what is requested. They receive a spec, optimize the lines, and ship the feature.
Architects: Those who look at the blank canvas and decide what should exist.
AI is already replacing the traditional coder, and it will do so completely. But this shift will simultaneously trigger an unprecedented demand for true architects — individuals who understand systems, not just isolated features; who weigh long-term consequences, not just lines of code; and who study governance rather than just standalone products.
The Experiment: Cirqus Heresy This is why I am building Cirqus Heresy.
It is not designed as a standard product, nor is it another attention-hungry platform. It is an intentional experiment in digital governance and creator sovereignty. At its core, the project explores a vital structural shift: moving away from centralized platform control and entering a space of distributed decision-making between autonomous creators.
Architecturally, it integrates a sovereign technical stack:
NFT-based membership for true ownership instead of renting space.
Decentralized storage (IPFS) to ensure content can never be erased by a single entity.
Smart contract escrow logic to secure interactions without trusted third parties.
DAO governance and native dispute resolution protocols.
But the most critical layer of Cirqus Heresy isn't technical. It is structural. It returns to the core question: Who holds the right to decide?
Hexastorm: The Governance Model To answer this, Cirqus Heresy is organized around six core roles. This is not a corporate hierarchy, but a strict distribution of functional archetypes:
Trickster: Destabilizes inertia and questions the assumptions others are afraid to touch.
Inquisitor: Analyzes the landscape and uncovers hidden systemic structures.
Architect: Translates structural philosophy into functional reality.
Alchemist: Navigates chaos to build and stabilize the internal economy.
Oracle: Maintains system equilibrium and binds the disparate parts into a whole.
Mage: Anticipates future shifts and directs critical resources.
Right now, these roles are actively forming. One crucial seat remains entirely empty: The Architect.
The Invitation Most Web3 governance experiments fail because they blindly copy the flaws of legacy systems: they offer voting without systemic understanding, decentralization without strategic clarity, and tokens without personal responsibility.
We are doing something different. We are building a reality where governance is an act of deliberate architectural design.
We are looking for a Technical Co-Founder to step into the role of the Architect. We are not looking for someone to just casually deploy smart contracts. We need a builder who can translate philosophy into protocol, design complex governance logic, and structure decentralized coordination from the ground up.
This role requires a rare combination: a deep foundation in systems thinking, a high comfort level with ambiguity, and an acute awareness of consequences in complex environments.
This is not a traditional job posting. There is no corporate hiring process, no HR screening, and no artificial structure. There is only alignment.
If this resonates with you, explore what has already been built:
cirqusheresy.com/structure
cirqusheresy.com/manifesto
If your inner Architect recognizes this space, leave a single signal in the comments:
“I am the Architect. Ready to build.”
We are not trying to launch another crypto project. We are attempting to answer the one question the rest of the industry avoids: What should we build — and who gets to decide?
Article
Le Casino à la Fin du MondeUn Manifeste pour les Hérétiques NumériquesLe Web3 nous a promis une révolution. Au lieu de cela, il a construit un système qui fabrique la croyance. À un moment donné, Internet a cessé de sembler humain. La plupart des gens ne s'en rendent même plus compte. Tu te réveilles, déverrouilles ton téléphone, et tu disparais dans un flux interminable d'émotions synthétiques, d'indignation fabriquée, d'opinions recyclées et de bruit algorithmique. Tout rivalise pour capter ton attention. Tout veut façonner ta perception avant même que tu ne te rendes compte que c'est en train d'arriver. Le Web2 a transformé l'identité humaine en données. Le Web3 a promis une échappatoire.

Le Casino à la Fin du MondeUn Manifeste pour les Hérétiques Numériques

Le Web3 nous a promis une révolution. Au lieu de cela, il a construit un système qui fabrique la croyance.
À un moment donné, Internet a cessé de sembler humain.
La plupart des gens ne s'en rendent même plus compte.
Tu te réveilles, déverrouilles ton téléphone, et tu disparais dans un flux interminable d'émotions synthétiques, d'indignation fabriquée, d'opinions recyclées et de bruit algorithmique. Tout rivalise pour capter ton attention. Tout veut façonner ta perception avant même que tu ne te rendes compte que c'est en train d'arriver.
Le Web2 a transformé l'identité humaine en données.
Le Web3 a promis une échappatoire.
Article
Un Marketeur Inconnu a Rejoint le Projet. Comment Arnaquer un Token à Tes Dépens ?Le Web3 est un endroit étrange et fascinant. Ici, tu peux passer des semaines à discuter en profondeur de la liberté, de la décentralisation et de l'avenir des communautés numériques, pour te réveiller un soir et découvrir que quelqu'un essaie de transformer ton projet en un énième memecoin à court terme, propulsé par des bots automatisés et un "listing urgent." Je suis récemment passé par ce scénario exact. Heureusement, un raisonnement froid et analytique s'est manifesté juste à temps. Peut-être que partager cette expérience sauvera quelqu'un d'une erreur très imprudente, et surtout, irréversible.

Un Marketeur Inconnu a Rejoint le Projet. Comment Arnaquer un Token à Tes Dépens ?

Le Web3 est un endroit étrange et fascinant. Ici, tu peux passer des semaines à discuter en profondeur de la liberté, de la décentralisation et de l'avenir des communautés numériques, pour te réveiller un soir et découvrir que quelqu'un essaie de transformer ton projet en un énième memecoin à court terme, propulsé par des bots automatisés et un "listing urgent."
Je suis récemment passé par ce scénario exact. Heureusement, un raisonnement froid et analytique s'est manifesté juste à temps. Peut-être que partager cette expérience sauvera quelqu'un d'une erreur très imprudente, et surtout, irréversible.
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Fool Speaks #1 — The Art of Renting Yourself Out When a human is born, they receive a default software package. A set of rigid scripts most people carry until death—that brief little interval we loudly call “life.” The state and corporate machines spend decades convincing you that you are free while you still ask permission for almost everything. Except scrolling short videos, chasing cheap dopamine, and slowly ruining your body. Those are your fully licensed freedoms. People are terrified of AI, considering most of them have never even booted up their own mind. The uncomfortable joke: most people never choose what they serve. They simply rent themselves out—easily, even willingly. For most, service means two things: the stomach, or the inner monkey demanding cheap dopamine through endless scrolling. But attention is the only real currency now. Shift the attention—and the system loses fuel. The vector of attention can be changed. The Circle is open—but not to everyone. 🔗 Read the full manifesto on Paragraph (Link in bio/comments). #CirqusHeresy #AttentionEconomy #Web3 #Philosophy
Fool Speaks #1 — The Art of Renting Yourself Out
When a human is born, they receive a default software package. A set of rigid scripts most people carry until death—that brief little interval we loudly call “life.”
The state and corporate machines spend decades convincing you that you are free while you still ask permission for almost everything. Except scrolling short videos, chasing cheap dopamine, and slowly ruining your body.
Those are your fully licensed freedoms.
People are terrified of AI, considering most of them have never even booted up their own mind.
The uncomfortable joke: most people never choose what they serve. They simply rent themselves out—easily, even willingly. For most, service means two things: the stomach, or the inner monkey demanding cheap dopamine through endless scrolling.
But attention is the only real currency now. Shift the attention—and the system loses fuel.
The vector of attention can be changed.
The Circle is open—but not to everyone.
🔗 Read the full manifesto on Paragraph (Link in bio/comments).
#CirqusHeresy #AttentionEconomy #Web3 #Philosophy
L'Art de se Louer : Un Manuel pour le Singe IntérieurAujourd'hui, je veux commencer une nouvelle série appelée Fool Speaks. J'espère rassembler un public capable de lire entre les lignes et possédant au moins un peu d'humour. Donc. Lorsqu'une personne naît, elle reçoit automatiquement un paquet logiciel par défaut. Un ensemble rigide de scripts que la plupart des gens portent jusqu'à la mort—cet bref petit intervalle que les humains appellent dramatiquement "la vie". Certains sont si fièrement attachés à leur liberté, comme s'ils avaient personnellement choisi leur pays, langue, religion, drapeau et le strongman de leur choix.

L'Art de se Louer : Un Manuel pour le Singe Intérieur

Aujourd'hui, je veux commencer une nouvelle série appelée Fool Speaks. J'espère rassembler un public capable de lire entre les lignes et possédant au moins un peu d'humour. Donc.
Lorsqu'une personne naît, elle reçoit automatiquement un paquet logiciel par défaut. Un ensemble rigide de scripts que la plupart des gens portent jusqu'à la mort—cet bref petit intervalle que les humains appellent dramatiquement "la vie". Certains sont si fièrement attachés à leur liberté, comme s'ils avaient personnellement choisi leur pays, langue, religion, drapeau et le strongman de leur choix.
Chasse au Dragon — Épisode I est maintenant en ligne. J'ai perdu 1,088 BNB pendant que je dormais. Pas de hackers de films. Pas de « cyber attaques d'élite. » En général, la crypto est volée beaucoup plus discrètement : vous faites confiance au mauvais appareil une fois. Un an plus tard, l’attaquant est revenu. C'est là que la Chasse au Dragon a commencé. Maintenant, nous construisons : — L’Arsenal — CHAO — Le Creuset Parce que les revues de sécurité ne signifient rien tant que la réalité ne les teste pas. Histoire complète sur YouTube. Cherchez : « J'ai perdu 1,088 BNB pendant que je dormais. Le Hacker n'est jamais parti.»
Chasse au Dragon — Épisode I est maintenant en ligne.
J'ai perdu 1,088 BNB pendant que je dormais.
Pas de hackers de films.
Pas de « cyber attaques d'élite. »
En général, la crypto est volée beaucoup plus discrètement :
vous faites confiance au mauvais appareil une fois.
Un an plus tard, l’attaquant est revenu.
C'est là que la Chasse au Dragon a commencé.
Maintenant, nous construisons :
— L’Arsenal
— CHAO
— Le Creuset
Parce que les revues de sécurité ne signifient rien tant que la réalité ne les teste pas.
Histoire complète sur YouTube.
Cherchez :
« J'ai perdu 1,088 BNB pendant que je dormais. Le Hacker n'est jamais parti.»
Voir la traduction
Cirqus. Not a typo. The cover charge — paid in attention. This is not a job posting. No auditions. The Cirqus doesn't need more clowns — it needs the right heretics. I am not searching for a crowd. I am waiting for the few who recognize the frequency. The Forge is hot. The Assay Office is open. If this feels familiar — not interesting, but familiar — the door is open. 📩 vitverse15@gmail.com Initiation — [Role] — [Your Artifact]
Cirqus. Not a typo. The cover charge — paid in attention.

This is not a job posting. No auditions. The Cirqus doesn't need more clowns — it needs the right heretics.

I am not searching for a crowd. I am waiting for the few who recognize the frequency.

The Forge is hot. The Assay Office is open.

If this feels familiar — not interesting, but familiar — the door is open.

📩 vitverse15@gmail.com
Initiation — [Role] — [Your Artifact]
Internet appartient au peuple. Pas aux FAI. Pas aux entreprises. À nous. Dawn Internet construit le réseau large bande décentralisé. Cirqus Heresy construit la guilde des créateurs décentralisée. Même mission. Couche différente. Exécute un nœud validateur depuis les débuts. 61,000+ points et ça continue. Rejoignez Dawn — recherchez "Dawn Internet" extension dans le Chrome Web Store Code de parrainage : zsuas4 X : @CirqusHeresy Liberatio per electionem. — OttoMyst
Internet appartient au peuple.
Pas aux FAI. Pas aux entreprises. À nous.
Dawn Internet construit le réseau large bande décentralisé.
Cirqus Heresy construit la guilde des créateurs décentralisée.
Même mission. Couche différente.
Exécute un nœud validateur depuis les débuts.
61,000+ points et ça continue.
Rejoignez Dawn — recherchez "Dawn Internet" extension dans le Chrome Web Store
Code de parrainage : zsuas4
X : @CirqusHeresy
Liberatio per electionem.
— OttoMyst
Voir la traduction
Do you have a snake in the grass? Maybe you just don't know it yet. Six months before the hack, I gave my laptop for repair to a stranger. Open sessions. Every wallet accessible. Every password saved in Chrome. I thought I was fixing a minor inconvenience. I was handing someone the keys to the kingdom. On October 31, 2024 — 1,088 BNB gone overnight while I slept. For 500 days I thought it was over. The snake had taken what it came for. Then on March 9, 2026 — I found someone else's account on my laptop. Profile "olddragon." Nine connected wallets. One of them mine. The snake never left. It had been quietly collecting my airdrops for a year and a half. Then greed made one stupid mistake. And I found everything. Full story + 9 wallet addresses — read the article on my profile. #crypto #hacked #BNB #cryptosecurity #dragonhunt #CirqusHeresy
Do you have a snake in the grass? Maybe you just don't know it yet.

Six months before the hack, I gave my laptop for repair to a stranger. Open sessions. Every wallet accessible. Every password saved in Chrome.

I thought I was fixing a minor inconvenience.
I was handing someone the keys to the kingdom.

On October 31, 2024 — 1,088 BNB gone overnight while I slept.

For 500 days I thought it was over. The snake had taken what it came for.

Then on March 9, 2026 — I found someone else's account on my laptop. Profile "olddragon." Nine connected wallets. One of them mine.

The snake never left. It had been quietly collecting my airdrops for a year and a half.

Then greed made one stupid mistake. And I found everything.

Full story + 9 wallet addresses — read the article on my profile.
#crypto #hacked #BNB #cryptosecurity #dragonhunt #CirqusHeresy
J'ai confié mon ordinateur portable à un inconnu. Avec des sessions ouvertes. Des portefeuilles. Des mots de passe. Tout. C'était l'erreur n°3. J'avais 6 erreurs au total. J'en ai fait toutes. Le résultat : 1 088 BNB disparus du jour au lendemain. MetaMask. TrustWallet. OKX. Pendant que je dormais. Mais la vraie histoire a commencé un an et demi plus tard - lorsque le hacker est revenu pour mes NFTs et m'a accidentellement montré son réseau entier. Neuf portefeuilles. Un profil. Une très stupide erreur de sa part. Histoire complète + toutes les 9 adresses + matériaux d'enquête : 👉 binance.com/en/square/post/301146885692897 #crypto #hacked #BNB #cryptosecurity #dragonhunt #CirqusHeresy
J'ai confié mon ordinateur portable à un inconnu. Avec des sessions ouvertes. Des portefeuilles. Des mots de passe. Tout.

C'était l'erreur n°3.

J'avais 6 erreurs au total. J'en ai fait toutes.

Le résultat : 1 088 BNB disparus du jour au lendemain. MetaMask. TrustWallet. OKX. Pendant que je dormais.

Mais la vraie histoire a commencé un an et demi plus tard - lorsque le hacker est revenu pour mes NFTs et m'a accidentellement montré son réseau entier.

Neuf portefeuilles. Un profil. Une très stupide erreur de sa part.

Histoire complète + toutes les 9 adresses + matériaux d'enquête :
👉 binance.com/en/square/post/301146885692897

#crypto #hacked #BNB #cryptosecurity #dragonhunt #CirqusHeresy
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I Got Hacked. A Year Later, the Hacker Came Back for Seconds. A Guide on "How to Lose Crypto"Prologue On October 31, 2024, I lost almost all my crypto. 1,088 BNB from an exchange. Tokens from MetaMask, TrustWallet, OKX. Months of airdrop karma — gone. I thought the story was over. Just an expensive lesson learned. I was wrong. On March 9, 2026 — nearly a year and a half later — I opened OpenSea and saw someone else's account on my laptop. Profile "olddragon." Who the hell is this? Nine connected wallets. One of them — mine. The hacker couldn't resist coming back for more. And possibly exposed his entire network. But before I tell you how I found him — I have to admit: in this story, I tried my best to make every possible mistake. And I succeeded Part 1: The Evening That Changed Everything October 30, 2024. Evening. Pattaya, Thailand. I was working on my laptop when Google Chrome suddenly crashed. All tabs closed. Browser refused to open properly. I thought — just a glitch. Getting late anyway, I'm tired. Shut everything down and went to sleep. At 23:47:51 that same evening, 1,088 BNB was withdrawn from my OKX account to address 0xA2a883ee4E3E31282615Bc6cE09DF32baE72aFF4. I was asleep. Between 03:55 and 03:58 on the night of October 31, my MetaMask and TrustWallet were drained. ETH, BNB, MATIC, OP, USDC, and others. Transaction after transaction. Every token of any value — gone overnight. I was asleep. Part 2: Morning of Zeros Woke up. Sat at my laptop. Opened my wallets and couldn't believe my eyes. Zeros. Zeros everywhere. MetaMask — empty. Trust Wallet — empty. OKX — empty. It's a peculiar feeling. Staring at the screen, realizing everything you worked for just... vanished. Not "something went wrong." Not "network error." Just — zero. Even my self-esteem dropped to match. Huobi survived. Partially. When I logged in, all assets had been converted to BNB. The attacker was inside. Ready to withdraw. Tried his best, but something went wrong for him. SMS confirmation on a separate number stopped the transaction. One layer of protection worked. One of the many I hadn't bothered to set up. And the most painful part — it wasn't the money. It was months of airdrop karma. Gitcoin Passport. All that stuff. Dozens of projects I'd participated in. Time. Effort. Hope. All measurable in opportunities already lost. Part 3: My Error Checklist I made almost every mistake possible in crypto. Here's the complete list — for those who want to follow my path: ✓ Mistake #1: Entered seed phrase on a website Yes. I did it! Some site with a big prize, I'm a super airdrop hunter, the thrill of the chase, greed. Result: minus $1,000+ in ATOM from Keplr. Instant. Irreversible. Basic mistake. I knew this stupid rule, but somehow broke it anyway. Quick and dumb. This wasn't related to the account hack. But I did make this idiotic move. ✓ Mistake #2: All eggs in one basket Google account — the center of everything. Email. Authenticator. Passwords in Chrome — how convenient, right? When it got compromised — everything collapsed at once. ✓ Mistake #3: Physical access 6-8 months before the hack, I had internet problems. Gave my laptop for repair. To someone I didn't know personally. For a whole day. They installed unlicensed Windows. No antivirus. No protection. I'm not claiming it was him. But I somehow managed to give physical access to a device with open sessions, wallets, passwords. To someone. ✓ Mistake #4: Google Authenticator only 2FA through Google? Useless if Google itself is compromised. Huobi survived only because it had SMS on a separate number. Independent channel. The attacker was inside, converted assets — but hit a wall and couldn't withdraw. ✓ Mistake #5: Passwords on computer Convenient. Deadly. ✓ Mistake #6: Didn't verify transactions Swapped addresses. Malicious contracts. I signed without looking. Six out of six. A full house of failures. Part 4: Race Against the Hacker But not everything was lost. Some assets were in staking. Staked coins can't be withdrawn instantly — takes about 20 days to unlock. When checking my wallets, I saw: someone had already submitted an unstaking request. Our hacker got greedy. I decided he'd had enough and canceled his request. Immediately created my own. The race began. Every day I checked — had he canceled my request? Created a new one? 20 days of this cat-and-mouse game. 20 days of war for my own money. I set an alarm and got there first. Saved some assets. But the hacker intercepted some coins too. It was a war with varying success. Victories alternating with defeats. Main lesson: in this game, you can fight back. Even when everything seems lost. Part 5: Useless Correspondence November 5, 2024, I wrote to OKX: "On the night of 31.10, funds were stolen from my exchange account." Correspondence began. Identity verification. Screenshots. Proof. Blocks. Unblocks. Weeks of endless back-and-forth with zero results. Support wasn't at fault. Blockchain works as designed: transactions are irreversible. That's its strength. That's its cruelty. And exactly why it's valuable. All that correspondence — just to regain access to emptied accounts. Part 6: A Year of Silence After the hack, I: — Reinstalled Windows, did it myself this time, multiple times. — Created new wallets in a different browser. — But kept the old, compromised ones. Why keep them? Airdrops still came. Sometimes NFTs arrived. I checked periodically. Sometimes intercepted assets before the hacker. Sometimes — didn't. A year passed relatively quietly. Learning from mistakes. Thought the story was over. Deleted Trust Wallet long ago. But kept MetaMask — it was linked to too many projects. Part 7: The NFT Trap March 2026. Decided to list some airdropped NFTs for sale from the old, compromised wallet. For a new project, I created a new OpenSea account, added a link to my website, and on March 9 was checking if it worked. And saw that my laptop was logged into someone else's account. What a surprise — profile "olddragon." Created April 2021. Asset value — $84.42. Connected social media: — Twitter: @lifeisweb10 (luckydragon Flow3 Network, 3,751 followers) — Instagram: @millefleursdalat (Vietnamese hotel Ngàn Hoa Mille Fleurs) And nine wallets. One of them — mine. The hacker spotted my NFTs. Got greedy and decided to combine wallets under one account. Part 8: Nine Wallets Here they are — all addresses from the "olddragon" profile: 0xba67d462b4443edc23efc6414f94c49649fb1385 ← MINE 0x52ce8da76d8dcdce46995ee379b957440b35207a 0x452bc70764abc6cef011a3e322e3ac179340bf54 0x9e684b04176772a38c5f929c65789a29257f1cf7 0x12b21e8131b2a7c8af4b87375385db8ce2fbef27 0x1412e5521143f53031a174fe80cbc5564e76e27d 0x83a2fec47453a0337c9bbd403bddd1b42c2d825f 0x9855a2f98d0bbd41fb0c4c8f21f2cb63901088ab 0x711cfcbba1260332b68e7d600e0673453b1128ed Either this is the hacker's network — nine stolen wallets under one profile. Or a network of victims — nine people hacked the same way. Either way — this is information I didn't have for a year and a half. Part 9: He's Still Here March 10, 2026. Yesterday. I checked activity on my compromised MetaMask. The latest theft was recent — WCT tokens I received as an airdrop. He swapped them to ETH and sent to address 0x2896e...903D7. March 11 — today — he's already double-dipping with someone else's WCT. My supposedly dead wallet is living its own life. Some guy is using my wallet as his own. Receives airdrops on my address. Withdraws to his. He thinks it's safe. I wouldn't be so sure... Part 10: Checklist "How NOT to Lose Crypto" I tested every stupid move, and trust me — if you give them a chance, they'll steal even a dollar. They don't just steal millions. 1. SMS confirmation on a separate number Google Authenticator is useless if Google is compromised. SMS on an independent number — separate channel. Huobi survived only because of this. 2. Diversify protection, not just assets Different wallets, different exchanges, different emails, different devices. No single point of failure. 3. Hardware wallet — a necessity Ledger. Trezor. Anything cold. I foolishly didn't use one and lost almost everything. 4. Physical access = full access Never give anyone a device with open sessions. No one. Not even for repair. Especially for repair. 5. Passwords — not on the computer Paper, safe, separate device, your own head, finally. Not where you work. 6. Verify every transaction Address. Amount. Contract. Every time. Tedious? Yes, but cheaper than losing everything! Definitely. 7. Never enter seed phrase online No website. No verification. No recovery. Never. Legitimate services don't ask. I knew this rule but broke it. Instantly lost $1,000+ in seconds. 8. Staking is your friend (sometimes) 20 days to unlock gave me time to counterattack. Some assets saved precisely because of this. 9. Karma, passports, reputation — also assets Gitcoin Passport. Wallet history. Project participation. Irreplaceable. Protect your crypto identity, not just money. Part 11: Why I'm Telling This I could have stayed silent. This isn't exactly a heroic story. It's a story of mistakes, losses, and self-soothing partial victories. But I'm telling it because I'm building a project meant to protect content creators. And it would be weird to talk about protection while hiding my own experience. The project is called Cirqus Heresy — The Creator Sovereignty Guild. We're building infrastructure where: — NFT membership replaces subscriptions (ownership, not rental) — Smart contracts secure deals (escrow without arbitrary decisions) — DAO governance (decisions made by creators) — IPFS storage (content that can't be deleted) I'm not building this because I'm a security expert. Obviously — I'm not. I tested all the ways to screw up. But that's exactly why I know what needs protecting. And from what. Epilogue: The Hunt Continues I don't know how the investigation will end. Don't know who's behind "olddragon." Don't know if they'll find the hacker. As a trickster and project founder, for me this is just a game for gaining experience and a chance to save someone from mistakes. And I have: — Nine wallet addresses — OpenSea profile with history — Connected Twitter and Instagram — DeBank profile from bio — A year and a half of transactions — Contact info for the person who had physical access to my laptop All investigation materials — PDF dossier, screenshots, addresses, full timeline — are documented publicly. Search on GitHub: CirqusHeresy / dragon-hunt Maybe it leads somewhere. Maybe not. Perhaps this article is being read by a future inquisitor, or an architect — co-creators full of ideas who want to join. But one thing I can definitely do: tell this story so someone doesn't repeat my mistakes. Or repeats them — if they really want to. I've provided the guide. To be continued... If you recognize your wallet among these nine — contact me. Maybe we're victims of the same hacker. Maybe together we'll learn more. Liberatio per electionem — Liberation through choice. Including the choice to learn from others' mistakes. And I've already paid for your education. #crypto #hacked #BNB #NFT #Web3 #DAO #CirqusHeresy #cryptosecurity #blockchain #dragonhunt

I Got Hacked. A Year Later, the Hacker Came Back for Seconds. A Guide on "How to Lose Crypto"

Prologue
On October 31, 2024, I lost almost all my crypto. 1,088 BNB from an exchange. Tokens from MetaMask, TrustWallet, OKX. Months of airdrop karma — gone.
I thought the story was over. Just an expensive lesson learned.
I was wrong.
On March 9, 2026 — nearly a year and a half later — I opened OpenSea and saw someone else's account on my laptop. Profile "olddragon." Who the hell is this? Nine connected wallets. One of them — mine.
The hacker couldn't resist coming back for more. And possibly exposed his entire network.
But before I tell you how I found him — I have to admit: in this story, I tried my best to make every possible mistake. And I succeeded
Part 1: The Evening That Changed Everything
October 30, 2024. Evening. Pattaya, Thailand.
I was working on my laptop when Google Chrome suddenly crashed. All tabs closed. Browser refused to open properly.
I thought — just a glitch. Getting late anyway, I'm tired. Shut everything down and went to sleep.
At 23:47:51 that same evening, 1,088 BNB was withdrawn from my OKX account to address 0xA2a883ee4E3E31282615Bc6cE09DF32baE72aFF4.
I was asleep.
Between 03:55 and 03:58 on the night of October 31, my MetaMask and TrustWallet were drained. ETH, BNB, MATIC, OP, USDC, and others. Transaction after transaction. Every token of any value — gone overnight.
I was asleep.
Part 2: Morning of Zeros
Woke up. Sat at my laptop. Opened my wallets and couldn't believe my eyes.
Zeros. Zeros everywhere.
MetaMask — empty. Trust Wallet — empty. OKX — empty.
It's a peculiar feeling. Staring at the screen, realizing everything you worked for just... vanished. Not "something went wrong." Not "network error." Just — zero. Even my self-esteem dropped to match.
Huobi survived. Partially. When I logged in, all assets had been converted to BNB. The attacker was inside. Ready to withdraw. Tried his best, but something went wrong for him. SMS confirmation on a separate number stopped the transaction.
One layer of protection worked. One of the many I hadn't bothered to set up.
And the most painful part — it wasn't the money.
It was months of airdrop karma. Gitcoin Passport. All that stuff. Dozens of projects I'd participated in. Time. Effort. Hope.
All measurable in opportunities already lost.
Part 3: My Error Checklist
I made almost every mistake possible in crypto. Here's the complete list — for those who want to follow my path:
✓ Mistake #1: Entered seed phrase on a website
Yes. I did it! Some site with a big prize, I'm a super airdrop hunter, the thrill of the chase, greed. Result: minus $1,000+ in ATOM from Keplr. Instant. Irreversible.
Basic mistake. I knew this stupid rule, but somehow broke it anyway. Quick and dumb. This wasn't related to the account hack. But I did make this idiotic move.
✓ Mistake #2: All eggs in one basket
Google account — the center of everything. Email. Authenticator. Passwords in Chrome — how convenient, right? When it got compromised — everything collapsed at once.
✓ Mistake #3: Physical access
6-8 months before the hack, I had internet problems. Gave my laptop for repair. To someone I didn't know personally. For a whole day.
They installed unlicensed Windows. No antivirus. No protection.
I'm not claiming it was him. But I somehow managed to give physical access to a device with open sessions, wallets, passwords. To someone.
✓ Mistake #4: Google Authenticator only
2FA through Google? Useless if Google itself is compromised.
Huobi survived only because it had SMS on a separate number. Independent channel. The attacker was inside, converted assets — but hit a wall and couldn't withdraw.
✓ Mistake #5: Passwords on computer
Convenient. Deadly.
✓ Mistake #6: Didn't verify transactions
Swapped addresses. Malicious contracts. I signed without looking.
Six out of six. A full house of failures.
Part 4: Race Against the Hacker
But not everything was lost.
Some assets were in staking. Staked coins can't be withdrawn instantly — takes about 20 days to unlock.
When checking my wallets, I saw: someone had already submitted an unstaking request. Our hacker got greedy.
I decided he'd had enough and canceled his request. Immediately created my own.
The race began.
Every day I checked — had he canceled my request? Created a new one? 20 days of this cat-and-mouse game. 20 days of war for my own money.
I set an alarm and got there first. Saved some assets.
But the hacker intercepted some coins too. It was a war with varying success. Victories alternating with defeats.
Main lesson: in this game, you can fight back. Even when everything seems lost.
Part 5: Useless Correspondence
November 5, 2024, I wrote to OKX:
"On the night of 31.10, funds were stolen from my exchange account."
Correspondence began. Identity verification. Screenshots. Proof. Blocks. Unblocks. Weeks of endless back-and-forth with zero results.
Support wasn't at fault. Blockchain works as designed: transactions are irreversible. That's its strength. That's its cruelty. And exactly why it's valuable.
All that correspondence — just to regain access to emptied accounts.
Part 6: A Year of Silence
After the hack, I:
— Reinstalled Windows, did it myself this time, multiple times.
— Created new wallets in a different browser.
— But kept the old, compromised ones.
Why keep them? Airdrops still came. Sometimes NFTs arrived.
I checked periodically. Sometimes intercepted assets before the hacker. Sometimes — didn't.
A year passed relatively quietly. Learning from mistakes. Thought the story was over.
Deleted Trust Wallet long ago. But kept MetaMask — it was linked to too many projects.
Part 7: The NFT Trap
March 2026. Decided to list some airdropped NFTs for sale from the old, compromised wallet.
For a new project, I created a new OpenSea account, added a link to my website, and on March 9 was checking if it worked.
And saw that my laptop was logged into someone else's account.
What a surprise — profile "olddragon." Created April 2021. Asset value — $84.42.
Connected social media:
— Twitter: @lifeisweb10 (luckydragon Flow3 Network, 3,751 followers)
— Instagram: @millefleursdalat (Vietnamese hotel Ngàn Hoa Mille Fleurs)
And nine wallets. One of them — mine.
The hacker spotted my NFTs. Got greedy and decided to combine wallets under one account.
Part 8: Nine Wallets
Here they are — all addresses from the "olddragon" profile:
0xba67d462b4443edc23efc6414f94c49649fb1385 ← MINE
0x52ce8da76d8dcdce46995ee379b957440b35207a
0x452bc70764abc6cef011a3e322e3ac179340bf54
0x9e684b04176772a38c5f929c65789a29257f1cf7
0x12b21e8131b2a7c8af4b87375385db8ce2fbef27
0x1412e5521143f53031a174fe80cbc5564e76e27d
0x83a2fec47453a0337c9bbd403bddd1b42c2d825f
0x9855a2f98d0bbd41fb0c4c8f21f2cb63901088ab
0x711cfcbba1260332b68e7d600e0673453b1128ed
Either this is the hacker's network — nine stolen wallets under one profile.
Or a network of victims — nine people hacked the same way.
Either way — this is information I didn't have for a year and a half.
Part 9: He's Still Here
March 10, 2026. Yesterday.
I checked activity on my compromised MetaMask.
The latest theft was recent — WCT tokens I received as an airdrop. He swapped them to ETH and sent to address 0x2896e...903D7.
March 11 — today — he's already double-dipping with someone else's WCT.
My supposedly dead wallet is living its own life. Some guy is using my wallet as his own. Receives airdrops on my address. Withdraws to his.
He thinks it's safe. I wouldn't be so sure...
Part 10: Checklist "How NOT to Lose Crypto"
I tested every stupid move, and trust me — if you give them a chance, they'll steal even a dollar. They don't just steal millions.
1. SMS confirmation on a separate number
Google Authenticator is useless if Google is compromised. SMS on an independent number — separate channel. Huobi survived only because of this.
2. Diversify protection, not just assets
Different wallets, different exchanges, different emails, different devices. No single point of failure.
3. Hardware wallet — a necessity
Ledger. Trezor. Anything cold. I foolishly didn't use one and lost almost everything.
4. Physical access = full access
Never give anyone a device with open sessions. No one. Not even for repair. Especially for repair.
5. Passwords — not on the computer
Paper, safe, separate device, your own head, finally. Not where you work.
6. Verify every transaction
Address. Amount. Contract. Every time. Tedious? Yes, but cheaper than losing everything! Definitely.
7. Never enter seed phrase online
No website. No verification. No recovery. Never. Legitimate services don't ask.
I knew this rule but broke it. Instantly lost $1,000+ in seconds.
8. Staking is your friend (sometimes)
20 days to unlock gave me time to counterattack. Some assets saved precisely because of this.
9. Karma, passports, reputation — also assets
Gitcoin Passport. Wallet history. Project participation. Irreplaceable. Protect your crypto identity, not just money.
Part 11: Why I'm Telling This
I could have stayed silent. This isn't exactly a heroic story. It's a story of mistakes, losses, and self-soothing partial victories.
But I'm telling it because I'm building a project meant to protect content creators. And it would be weird to talk about protection while hiding my own experience.
The project is called Cirqus Heresy — The Creator Sovereignty Guild.
We're building infrastructure where:
— NFT membership replaces subscriptions (ownership, not rental)
— Smart contracts secure deals (escrow without arbitrary decisions)
— DAO governance (decisions made by creators)
— IPFS storage (content that can't be deleted)
I'm not building this because I'm a security expert. Obviously — I'm not. I tested all the ways to screw up.
But that's exactly why I know what needs protecting. And from what.
Epilogue: The Hunt Continues
I don't know how the investigation will end. Don't know who's behind "olddragon." Don't know if they'll find the hacker. As a trickster and project founder, for me this is just a game for gaining experience and a chance to save someone from mistakes.
And I have:
— Nine wallet addresses
— OpenSea profile with history
— Connected Twitter and Instagram
— DeBank profile from bio
— A year and a half of transactions
— Contact info for the person who had physical access to my laptop
All investigation materials — PDF dossier, screenshots, addresses, full timeline — are documented publicly. Search on GitHub: CirqusHeresy / dragon-hunt
Maybe it leads somewhere. Maybe not. Perhaps this article is being read by a future inquisitor, or an architect — co-creators full of ideas who want to join.
But one thing I can definitely do: tell this story so someone doesn't repeat my mistakes.
Or repeats them — if they really want to. I've provided the guide.
To be continued...
If you recognize your wallet among these nine — contact me.
Maybe we're victims of the same hacker. Maybe together we'll learn more.
Liberatio per electionem — Liberation through choice.
Including the choice to learn from others' mistakes.
And I've already paid for your education.
#crypto #hacked #BNB #NFT #Web3 #DAO #CirqusHeresy #cryptosecurity #blockchain #dragonhunt
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