To the person who hacked my account earlier this week: thanks for all the new crypto followers.
To my new crypto followers: I’m going to be a very disappointing follow. https://t.co/DtO2gtgHjQ — Brian Chesky (@bchesky) July 16, 2026
Investor Takeaway
While the Airbnb posts were fake, the market’s willingness to believe them underscores expectations that major consumer brands will eventually explore tokenization.
A Hack Without The Usual Crypto Payload
What made the compromise convincing was what it lacked. The thread named no token sale, wallet address, giveaway or investment link, the signatures that usually expose a hijacked account within seconds. Instead it read as a measured, on-trend take on a subject real executives are actively debating, which is why much of the audience, and several outlets, took it at face value. AI-detection firm Pangram flagged the text as machine-generated, pointing to a uniform syntactic pattern built to imitate Chesky’s cadence. The episode marks a shift from smash-and-grab token scams toward slower narrative manipulation, where a hijacked account launders an idea rather than drains a wallet. Airbnb reported the incident to X, which secured the account. How the attacker gained access, and who was responsible, remains unclear.Investor Takeaway
Credibility itself is becoming a target, with hackers increasingly seeking to shape narratives rather than execute immediate financial scams.
