Yeah, none of us know what the hell those two vendor pages are about or why they have such strange messages on them. I'm not sure what happened there, but it wouldn't make sense for scammers to do that because scammers are here for money, and simply changing vendor profiles to read weird shit is not going to make them any richer. There is really no excuse for vendors providing their passwords and PINs to phishing sites, but I want to make clear that it was not a "hack" - passwords and PINs weren't hacked or guessed or brute forced, they were entered into a phishing site. Everyone should know better than to login to a page that is not at the following correct url: http://silkroadvb5piz3r.onion If there is ever a legitimate message from DPR to vendors, it will be signed with his PGP key. All other messages from SR claiming to ask for donations, offer investment opportunities, or offer some kind of "upgrade" to a user's account are scams. All a person needs to do to be absolutely sure of this (if the horrible grammar of the message wasn't enough to raise flags) is to know how to check the validity of a PGP signature.