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Home/Glossary/Cryptocurrency Scam
Glossary · Scam Type

What Is a Cryptocurrency Scam?

Any fraudulent scheme that exploits cryptocurrency and blockchain technology to steal money, including fake exchanges, rug pulls, phishing for wallet credentials, fraudulent ICOs, and pig butchering investment scams.

Quick Definition

Any fraudulent scheme that exploits cryptocurrency and blockchain technology to steal money, including fake exchanges, rug pulls, phishing for wallet credentials, fraudulent ICOs, and pig butchering investment scams.

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01Cryptocurrency Scam explained.

Cryptocurrency scams have exploded alongside the growth of digital currencies. The irreversible nature of blockchain transactions makes them the perfect vehicle for fraud — once crypto is sent, it cannot be reversed or recovered through traditional banking channels.

Scams in the crypto space take many forms: fake exchanges that steal deposits, rug pulls where token creators drain liquidity, phishing for wallet seed phrases, fake airdrops that drain wallets through malicious smart contracts, and elaborate investment scams using fake trading platforms.

The complexity of cryptocurrency technology creates an information asymmetry that scammers exploit. Many victims don't fully understand wallets, private keys, or smart contracts, making them vulnerable to social engineering that would be transparent to experienced users.

02How it works.

01Scammers exploit crypto's complexity and the promise of quick riches to identify potential victims
02Victims are lured through social media, dating apps, fake celebrity endorsements, or direct messages
03They're directed to fake trading platforms, fraudulent tokens, or malicious wallet-connecting websites
04Money is deposited or crypto is transferred to wallets controlled by the scammers
05Withdrawals are blocked with excuses (fees, taxes, minimum balances) until the victim stops paying

03Real-world example.

The FTX collapse in 2022, while technically a fraud rather than a traditional scam, resulted in the loss of approximately $8 billion in customer funds. Founder Sam Bankman-Fried was convicted of fraud for misusing customer deposits, demonstrating that even established crypto platforms can be vehicles for fraud.

04How to protect yourself.

01Only use well-known, regulated exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini)
02Never share your wallet seed phrase or private keys with anyone
03Don't connect your wallet to unknown websites or sign unfamiliar smart contracts
04Be extremely skeptical of guaranteed returns or "risk-free" crypto investments
05Never take investment advice from online romantic interests or social media strangers
06Use IsThisAScam to verify any crypto-related messages or URLs
Related Terms
Rug PullPig ButcheringPonzi SchemeSIM Swapping
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