Abstract:Fake emails and phishing scams are on the rise in crypto, targeting users with fraudulent wallet setup instructions. Stay vigilant and protect your assets.
The crypto community has been increasingly targeted by fraudulent emails posing as major crypto exchanges, tricking users into creating wallets with pre-generated recovery phrases controlled by scammers.
Social engineering attacks are also on the rise; hackers have recently infiltrated Kaito AIs social media accounts to influence token prices, and malicious spoof Zoom calls have targeted cryptocurrency founders.
In addition, physical attacks and high-profile security breaches are becoming more common. Kaito AI and its creator, Yu Hu, were victims of a social media hack where attackers took control of the project's X account and spread false information. They falsely claimed that users' funds were at risk and that Kaito wallets had been compromised.
On-chain investigator DeFi Warhol revealed that the hackers had previously set a short position on KAITO tokens, indicating the posts were part of a larger plan to manipulate the price. Their goal was to cause panic selling, crashing the token's value to profit from the market drop.
Phishing scams targeting users of popular exchanges like Coinbase and Gemini have also increased. Cybercriminals are sending emails disguised as official communications from these platforms, advising users to switch to self-custodial wallets. The emails include pre-generated recovery phrases, which scammers control, alongside instructions to download legitimate wallet services. Once users create wallets using these phrases and transfer their assets, scammers can steal the funds.
Coinbase has issued a warning to users, urging them not to trust pre-generated recovery phrases and reminding them that the platform will never send such messages. Stay alert and cautious to protect your digital assets from these rising threats.
US authorities have announced plans to return $7 million to victims of a cryptocurrency investment fraud that deceived investors into sending funds to fraudulent trading platforms.
Hong Kong police, HKMA work with banks to freeze fraud-linked accounts faster, addressing scam issues while protecting the city's financial reputation.
Globe Telecom partners with Gogolook to provide free Whoscall Premium Basic, enhancing digital security with caller ID, web checker, and ID security features.
Operation Red Card sees 306 arrests across seven African nations, dismantling major cybercrime networks involved in banking fraud, scams, and phishing.