You won’t believe the depths to which crypto scammers on Twitter are willing to sink

Published at: Sept. 22, 2020

Last Friday night, crypto YouTuber Ivan on Tech messaged me on Twitter. Shortly into our conversation, he graciously offered me an investment opportunity in “Bitcoin trading/mining”, courtesy of a platform that he alleged was associated with Binance. 

In reality, however, I was being approached by an Ivan impersonator, peddling a crypto affinity scam. The platform "Ivan" advertised, called Cryptobinance, has no affiliation with the actual Binance exchange, a representative of the company told Cointelegraph. But I played along with the scammer to see what additional information could be elicited from him. I told him that I was impressed by his offer and would be willing to invest 50 Bitcoin (BTC) into the scheme — funds that I claimed were part of my pension plan.

I registered at Cryptobinance. The next step for me would have been to send some Bitcoin to the supposed-exchange's address in order to fund my investment activity. According to data from Crystal Blockchain, the address supplied (39vgPqvsT1YbahCUcRrjtHR6a1oWaUZzxN) has been active since August 23 and has received 0.3 BTC thus far. The address appears to belong to a Coinbase user. We do not know if this is the only address that this particular scammer uses to solicit unsuspecting investors, but a search for this address on the Bitcoinabuse website did not return any reports.

Meanwhile, Ivan’s impersonator assured me that this investment would be fantastic for my portfolio:

I was curious to see how low this scammer would go. After some consideration, I decided to invent a friend who I claimed was a paralyzed army veteran. My brave, though entirely fictional, companion had saved up some money, meant to be used for his medical expenses. These facts were of no consequence to faux-Ivan:

Without hesitation, the scammer assured that both of us would profit handsomely, if only we would entrust our savings to Cryptobinance.

It appears that not much has changed in terms of how Twitter handles scam-related accounts, in light of the now-notorious hack of its services back in July. During that event, a few teenagers held much of the online world hostage after managing to take over accounts belonging to Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Elon Musk, Bill Gates, and many others. Naught but a lack of ambition and foresight on the part of the hackers limited this major attack to a mere 12 BTC in damages. According to Blockstream’s co-founder Adam Back, it is almost impossible to convince Twitter to crack down on impersonators who openly scam the platform’s users:

“If you report an impersonator they ask you to upload government id afresh on each reported handle. And unfortunately, even when you include complaints that people are being scammed and contacting you about refunds they are very slow to block. It's been over a month for me with @adam3u_s [one of many Back’s Twitter impersonators].”

The problem has become so serious for Blockstream that they even created their own database of all scams trying to profit on their brand.

Similar complaints have been levied against another major platform, YouTube. The abundance of YouTube scams involving Cardano (ADA) has forced its founder Charles Hoskinson to embed “I will never give away ADA” into his YouTube streams.

At the same time, many legitimate crypto YouTubers have fallen victim to the platform’s censorship. Perhaps these platforms do not feel that the crypto niche is important enough to allocate adequate amounts of resources to monitoring for unscrupulous activities. However, as Twitter’s founder Jack Dorsey is a major crypto advocate himself, it comes as a surprise that Twitter hasn’t grasped the seriousness of this issue.

This is especially problematic, given the proximity to the U.S. presidential elections and the many legitimate fundraising efforts occurring in tandem. If social media giants are unable or unwilling to establish adequate solutions to these dire threats, the blockchain community may need to provide users with their own viable, decentralized alternatives.

There is no doubt that this behavior violates Twitter's Financial scam policy, which reads:

"You may not deceive others into sending you money or personal financial information by operating a fake account or by posing as a public figure or an organization."

The issue appears to be that the company may not have enough resources to police its large and ever-growing user base. In 2019, Dorsey and Vijaya Gadde, who leads trust and safety legal and public policy at Twitter, appeared on the Joe Rogan podcast to answer questions about the company's efforts to regulate speech on the platform. During the podcast, Gadde said that every day, users generate hundreds of millions of tweets, while the company employs only 4,000 individuals. Thus, much of the monitoring duties are delegated to contractors, whose numbers are adjusted dynamically depending on the demand. 

Dorsey said that in his opinion, blockchain technology is a game changer for the industry, as internet content will live forever, which presents unique challenges and opportunities:

"You can say that everything on the Internet lives forever, but that's generally not true because any host or any connection can take it down. The blockchain changes all that. It can actually exist forever, permanently, without anyone being able to touch it, government, company, individual. And that is a reality that we need to pay attention to and really understand our value."

Towards the end of the conversation, YouTuber Tim Pool, who was co-hosting the podcast with Rogan, said that he hopes to see the blockchain version of Twitter soon, with Rogan responding: 

"It's going to happen whether we like it or not."

According to a spokesperson from Binance, the company files approximately 180 monthly scam reports. Similar to Blockstream, Binance has built an online portal, called Binance Verify, that allows users to determine the authenticity of all Binance-inspired accounts and websites.

Cointelegraph has reached out to the real Ivan on Tech, but did not receive a response in time for publication.

Tags
Related Posts
Financial future or false promises? Crypto firms go big on ads in 2022
Advertisements are in abundance everywhere we go — from billboards seen throughout road trips to commercials displayed every fifteen minutes or so during television shows. It’s also the case that most advertisements today display messages from major internet-based brands like Amazon, which was ranked as the largest advertiser in the United States in 2020. Telecommunication providers and payment giants like American Express have also been listed as some of the biggest advertisers in the United States. These companies typically spend billions of dollars per year on marketing messages aimed to inform, persuade and remind consumers about their products and services. …
Adoption / March 14, 2022
Google Keeps Promoting Crypto Scams Despite Strict Crypto Policies
While Google’s subsidiary, YouTube, is facing a lawsuit for promoting cryptocurrency scams, Google’s advertising platform continues to display fraudulent crypto ads through its advertising network. According to a report by Bitcoin (BTC) crypto exchange, CoinCorner, Google Ads was running an ad for CoinCorner’s phishing clone website, CoinCornerr.com. The issue was reported by CoinCorner’s marketing manager, Molly Spiers, on April 30. Google Ads promotes a crypto scam but doesn’t want to promote a real firm Spiers told Cointelegraph that CoinCorner’s team first noticed the fraudulent ad on Thursday morning after searching for “CoinCorner” on Google.com and Google.co.uk. According to the executive, …
Bitcoin / April 30, 2020
Binance Jersey to Reward Hacker Who Compromised Its Domain Name
Cryptocurrency exchange Binance will compensate the white hat hacker who compromised Binance Jersey’s Internet domain name and Twitter account. Binance Jersey Twitter and domain compromised In a post published on Aug. 16, crypto exchange Binance Jersey announced that a white hat hacker was able to gain access to the @BinanceJE Twitter account (the official Binance Jersey profile) and the platform’s Internet domain name. Still, the company was able to recover the domain name within a few minutes, and the Twitter handle in some hours. Per the announcement, the hacker obtained access “by social engineering the email domain name service provider,” …
Cryptocurrency Exchange / Aug. 17, 2019
British Army’s social media accounts hacked by crypto scammers
The British Army’s official Twitter, Facebook and YouTube accounts were breached on Sunday for almost four hours, with scammers promoting rip-off nonfungible token (NFT) collections and cryptocurrency scams. Just after 2:00 pm EST on Sunday, the United Kingdom Ministry of Defence (MOD) Press Office tweeted it was aware the Army’s social media accounts were compromised and had begun an investigation. Nearly four hours later, close to 5:45 pm EST, the Office provided an update that the account breaches were resolved. The British Army's official Twitter account also apologized for the posts, saying it would conduct an investigation and “learn from …
Defi / July 4, 2022
‘Far too easy’ — Crypto researcher’s fake Ponzi raises $100K in hours
Crypto influencer FatManTerra claims to have gathered over $100,000 worth of Bitcoin (BTC) from crypto investors in an investment scheme that was later revealed as fake. The crypto researcher said he created the fake investment scheme as an experiment and to teach people a lesson about blindly following the investment advice of influencers. The account on Twitter has around 101,100 followers and is mostly known for being a former Terra proponent that now actively speaks out against the project and founder Do Kwon following its $40 billion collapse in May. In a Sept. 5 tweet, FatManTerra told his followers he …
Bitcoin / Sept. 6, 2022