Hi shutdem, Unless you had an incredibly weak password and PIN (such as 123456789 etc.) then there is no way that your account was compromised by an attack. The ONLY ways that your account could have been compromised is if you entered your login details (including your PIN, which Silk Road will NEVER ask you for at login time) into a phishing site, or else allowed a keylogger / datalogger to be installed or downloaded onto your system. You need to memorise the correct URL - silkroadvb5piz3r.onion - as there are a number of scam sites out there with "silkroad" in the URL that ask you for your PIN when you're logging in. The reason you could not log in to the site when you tried to change your passphrase is because the phishers had already changed it to prevent you from having access to it once you had logged out. You will need to message SR Support with the last SR deposit address that you sent money to, along with anything else (transactions, messages etc.) that you can remember. The phisher's also have your former passphrase due to you giving it to them when you tried to log in at the phishing site so that isn't really any use. I hate to have to say it but every member is responsible for their own security; ensuring that you are visiting the correct Silk Road URL at all times and ensuring that there is no malware on your computer is basic, essential security practice. This has been a hard and expensive lesson for you to learn, but as Bitcoin transactions are irreversible there is no way we can get the Bitcoin back for you. Libertas