The digital heist employed a crafty mix of AI-generated imagery—including a doctored photo of Future holding a coin—and sophisticated phishing techniques to gain unauthorized access. It’s like using a celebrity’s house keys to throw a party they never approved, then sending the cleanup bill to unsuspecting fans.
The scammers launched their token via Pump.fun, a decentralized platform for meme coins. The coin briefly rocketed to a $900,000 market cap before spectacularly crashing—think Icarus with a crypto wallet. When the attackers dumped 70% of the total supply in one massive transaction, the value plummeted by 98%, leaving a smoking crater worth just $15,000-$20,000.
Meanwhile, the perpetrators quietly pocketed over 250 SOL (worth approximately $49,000) and disappeared into the digital ether. The name “FREEBANDZ” cleverly exploited Future’s actual record label, adding a veneer of legitimacy that fooled casual observers long enough to separate them from their money. This type of deception is a classic example of investment fraud tactics that prey on people’s trust in familiar brands and celebrity endorsements.
This isn’t an isolated incident. Similar celebrity-linked scams have targeted UFC accounts and exploited Kanye West’s name. The UFCCoin scam followed the same pattern, reaching an eleven million dollar valuation before collapsing by 97% when scammers sold their holdings. The rise of AI has only made creating convincing fake promotional content easier than ever—it’s like Photoshop on algorithmic steroids. The hackers conducted coordinated breaches simultaneously across multiple high-profile accounts to maximize their fraudulent impact.
For those in the social media ecosystem, the incident highlights critical security vulnerabilities. Even verified accounts with millions of followers remain susceptible to determined attackers wielding increasingly sophisticated tools.
The posts were quickly deleted after the fraud became apparent, with Future’s account ultimately disabled. As for Instagram users and crypto enthusiasts? Consider this a sobering reminder that in the wild west of meme coins, not every celebrity endorsement is what it seems—even when it comes from their official account.








