January 02, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Tether’s Market Value Sees Sharpest Decline Since FTX Crash as MiCA Kicks In KuCoin Enables Crypto Point-of-Sale Payments by QR-Code XRP Rockets 11% as Bitcoin Starts New Year With Bullish Bang Bitcoin-Leveraged Play MicroStrategy’s Bullish Call Skew Disappears in Cautious Market Sentiment Garanti BBVA’s to Provide Crypto Trading Services in Hint of Things to Come A Year of Crypto Tech In Review How Web3 Is Disrupting AI Cloud Computing Three Questions Reveal Your Ideal Bitcoin Allocation Why a U.S. Bitcoin Strategic Reserve Is Critical to Fending Off China Blockchain Fragmentation Is a Major Problem That Must Be Addressed in 2025

Crypto Scammers Are Now Stealing From Other Crypto Thieves

Crypto scammers have finally found their thieving match: Themselves.

A new scam has been making the rounds mainly on YouTube that would make even the most cunning trickster tip their hat, security firm Kaspersky said in a security update last week.

“I have USDT stored in my wallet, and I have the seed phrase. How do I transfer my funds to another wallet?,” Kaspersky noted one such comment. The specific wallet held over $8,000 worth of stablecoins on the Tron blockchain. A seed phrase is a word string that grants their knowers access to a crypto wallet.

This question, however, was not from a crypto novice but a cleverly laid trap. Those stablecoins were held in a multi-signature wallet, and theoretically require a gas fee to be able to withdraw funds.

However, when thieves attempted to siphon off the funds by sending Tron’s TRX tokens to the wallet, the sent tokens mysteriously evaporated into another wallet controlled by the scammers.

The catch is that the bait wallet is set up as a multi-signature wallet. To authorize outgoing transactions in such wallets, approval from two or more people is required, so transferring USDT to a personal wallet won’t work and instead gets transferred somewhere else.

“The scammers are impersonating beginners who foolishly share access to their crypto wallets, tricking equally naive thieves — who end up becoming the victims,” Kaspersky said. “In this scenario, the scammers are something like digital Robin Hoods, as the scheme primarily targets other crooked individuals.”

This scam isn’t a lone wolf either, with several instances across the internet teeming with similar comments from new accounts, all of which dangled the same seed phrase, Kaspersky said.

As such, gas fees are typically cheap and cost less than $10 across most blockchains, meaning the hustle is likely targeting wannabe thieves rather than being a complex operation seeking to steal thousands, or even millions, of dollars.

But expect a crypto criminal to make money whenever there’s a chance to.

This post was originally published on this site