Not really. You can see the IP which relayed that, but it frequently isn't the person who actually sent the transaction. The IP that comes up for the withdrawals is 127.0.0.1, which is useless.
so that is done through tor?
Actually this is my adress located at strongcoin
the WD began yesterday evening and are now beeing tubled..
Maybe or maybe not the point is that the origination IP address is never recorded. blockchain.info saying the IP address is x simply means that is the first node which relayed it to blockchain.info. It could be the IP address of entity who submitted that transaction but it also could just happen to be a node which received the tx from another node who received it from another node who recieved it from another node ..... who received it from the source.
It is actually impossible to get in without knowing my megahyper password or having acess to lastpass..and even lastpass doesnt know it..
i am baffled on how this is possible..
My guess just based on past thefts is a keylogger. Your PC is infected and the attacker recorded the password the last time you logged in and then just logged in as you.
Use 2 factor authentication. If a service doesn't offer 2 factor authentication then don't use the service.
A password which is "fj32!89r@pnfejSSnfds9X089RD03j^lkj%sa&uyi2nk;ff" doesn't provide any more security than "password123" if the attacker is using a keylogger.
Use 2 factor authentication.
Use 2 factor authentication.
Use 2 factor authentication.
Use 2 factor authentication.
Use 2 factor authentication.
I have yet to see one of these reports from someone who's account was protected by 2 factor authentication.
While nothing is "hackproof" 2 factor does raise the bar very high and as such it is far more likely a hacker will just exploit weaker targets.