The project, Harvest Keeper, claimed to optimize trading processes and promised a 101% return on investment within 21 days.
Recently, artificial intelligence (AI) has become a hot topic because of the features shown in ChatGPT v4, and a project that claims to be a decentralized application based on artificial intelligence took nearly $1 million from users in a suspicious scam.
Blockchain security platform CertiK recently confirmed that Castrol Guardians had stolen about $933000 in user assets as of the time of this writing. In addition, users lost about $219000 in ice fishing transactions on Etherum, BNB Chain and Polygon, according to CertiK. The security company urged users to revoke the permissions they granted to the project and warned people to stop interacting with its website.
The harvest custodian claims to be an artificial intelligence project that "optimizes the transaction process, maximizes payment" and promises a 4.81 per cent return on the user's deposit. The platform promises a 101 per cent return on investment within 21 days and an 8 per cent referral reward on its website. The project has nearly 30, 000 followers on Twitter and more than 32000 on its Telegram channel.
Cointelegraph contacted Castrol's custodian for comment but did not get a response.
At the same time, as ChatGPT's hype resurfaced on Twitter, dozens of accounts claiming to be related to "CryptoGPT" have emerged on the social platform. The hashtag of a token item called "CryptoGPT" went viral on Twitter on March 10th. With its emergence, there have been several similar accounts, some of which are fake advertising gifts. Dozens of Twitter accounts of the same name also haunt the social platform, some of which offer gifts and airdrops suspected to be fake.
Since the latest version of ChatGPT shows that it can audit intelligent contracts on ethernet, many people wonder whether it will eventually replace developers. However, at the recent ETHDubai event, blockchain developers said they believed that the new iteration of the popular AI tool would not replace developers, but would help them.