I figured that too but unfortunately just too late.
I do feel however that there needs to be some accountability as we are all responsible to make sure our accounts are as secure as possible.
How difficult would it be to connect through a VPN or tor browser and login into my account, scam a bunch of trusting users and then after a day or two come back and just say no my account was hacked. In this case, the hacker was quite familiar with our way of doing business and that led me to believe that all was in order.
Not saying that is what happened here but it sure as hell could have been.
There were some small things that my spidey senses picked up but I put my faith in the system. I should have trusted my intuition, lesson learned. I won't be taken for a fool twice.
It's my understanding that the post was reported a few times during the course of the morning and would just be great if there was some kind of system in place to show that this post has been reported and a word of caution is recommended.
Looking at the wallet I transfer the ETH to it seems that I am not the only one that was taken for a ride, unfortunately.
The Address 0xEa0A9e1DB1C7569D5217DA15C9b427bd08faFFC1 page allows users to view transactions, balances, token holdings and transfers of ERC-20, ERC-721 and ERC-1155 (NFT) tokens, and analytics.
etherscan.io
But at the end of the day, I am seeing this as my donation to those less fortunate.