# mult-ichain.github.io — SUSPICIOUS > Concerned about mult-ichain.github.io? Learn why this domain poses phishing risks and how to protect your personal information online. ## Summary PhishDestroy identifies mult-ichain.github.io as a low-risk phishing domain. Although it appears to be a legitimate site related to the Multichain cross-chain router protocol, it has been flagged on multiple security blocklists and remains active. Users should be cautious when visiting this domain since phishing sites often aim to steal sensitive data by pretending to be trusted platforms. This phishing domain masquerades as a reputable blockchain-related service to lure users into revealing private credentials or signing malicious transactions. By exploiting the trust users have in recognizable names like Multichain, attackers may trick visitors into providing wallet keys or personal information that can lead to financial loss or identity theft. To stay safe, users should avoid interacting with mult-ichain.github.io and verify URLs carefully before entering any credentials. Employing updated security software and consulting reliable threat intelligence sources like PhishDestroy can help detect such threats early. When in doubt, access official websites directly rather than through suspicious links to minimize exposure to phishing scams. ## Threat Details - Verdict: SUSPICIOUS - Site status: alive (HTTP 200) - Target brand: across - Page title: Multichain - Cross-Chain Router Protocol. ## Domain Intelligence - Registrar: GitHub, Inc. - Country: USA - IP: 185.199.110.153 - Nameservers: NS_NOT_FOUND ## Detection Status - VirusTotal: 1 vendors flagged Vendors: ["Trustwave"] - Google Safe Browsing: clean - Blocklists: 3 hits Lists: ["PhishDestroy", "MetaMask", "SEAL"] ## Live Page Content - Meta description: Multichain is a cross-chain router protocol; an infrustructure for multi-chain ecosystem, envisioned to become the ultimate router for Web 3. ### Page Text Multichain - Cross-Chain Router Protocol. Multichain - Cross-Chain Router Protocol Enterprise NFTs in MultiChain 2.2 The easiest path to non-fungible tokens in permissioned chains Earlier this week, we released MultiChain 2.2 with integrated support for non-fungible tokens (NFTs). Over the past year, we’ve been talking to lots of customers about how they’d like to see NFTs supported on our platform. And with the release of MultiChain 2.2, we’re delivering exactly what they need. What’s an NFT? But first some background. If you’ve been watching the blockchain world for long enough, you’ll recognize the pattern. Every year or two, there’s a big new idea about how blockchains will transform some part of the economy. The media and money pile on and the price of everything skyrockets. In 2013, it was all about bitcoin as a currency. In 2015, Ethereum and decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs). In 2016, private blockchains for banks. In 2018, an explosion of new public blockchains. In 2020, decentralized finance (DeFi). Now, in 2021, it’s the turn of non-fungible tokens (NFTs). So what is an NFT? It’s a single unit of value, issued onto a blockchain, which can be transferred, sold and exchanged by that blockchain’s users. Unlike cryptocurrencies or regular on-chain assets, only one unit of each NFT is available, so it can only be owned by one person or organization. By contrast, dollars and bitcoins are “fungible”, meaning that many units of these assets are in circulation, and each unit is perfectly interchangeable with any other. But why would anyone pay for an NFT? Because it’s associated, through a piece of data on the blockchain, with an item of value. In theory, an NFT could represent the ownership of a house or car, so whoever owns the NFT on the blockchain has legal ownership of the related physical asset. In reality, most NFTs issued and bought today represent a piece of digital art, or some other type of digital collectible. Digital but Unique But surely digital things can be infinitely reproduced because, well, they’re digital? What is the value of owning the NFT for a big JPEG or viral video if anyone can easily duplicate the content? This question, while valid, could equally be asked about physical art. Right now, you can buy a full-sized “museum quality” replica of the Mona Lisa for a few hundred dollars online. And yet, the original is worth closer to a billion. Whether it makes rational sense or not, we humans see psychological and cultural value in owning the original of something. The first copy that ever existed. The version produced by the artist herself. The same one that everyone else wants. In this respect, digital art, represented by a NFT, is not all that different from a classical painting. Sure, anyone can fake it. But everyone knows where the real one is. Bragging rights aside, there can also be concrete benefits to owning an NFT. Holding the token can grant you the right to display the digital art in public or on a w ## Evidence - Screenshot: https://urlscan.io/screenshots/019b2e0f-9e9b-7589-94dc-1d1828759b94.png - Cloudflare Radar: https://radar.cloudflare.com/scan/1e00d6a8-e677-4b8e-b817-a18b1739df2c - PhishDestroy: https://phishdestroy.io/domain/mult-ichain.github.io/ ## If You Visited This Site 1. Change any passwords you may have entered 2. Enable 2FA on all related accounts 3. Monitor your accounts for unauthorized activity 4. Report to: FBI IC3, Europol, local authorities --- Report by PhishDestroy | https://phishdestroy.io/domain/mult-ichain.github.io/ Last updated: 2026-03-14