Phishing attacks have been an ongoing problem in the cryptocurrency industry. Hackers are now finding cleverer ways to con their victims.
It was the fake website for an event, which was intended to fool victims into giving up their crypto.
- ETH Denver is the longest-running ETH event and the largest in the world. It will be held between February 24th to March 5th this year.
- Conferences are a common place of interest for many people. Many of these newcomers are not yet aware of the risks involved in the industry.
- Hackers have created a fake website to mimic the official website at ETH Denver.
- Crypto security firm detected the threat Blockfence.
Another scam every day.
The scammer was targeting the Ethereum Denver Website. Blockfence is here for you to defend yourself and fight scammers together. The scam contract was identified as high-risk by our ML algorithm, our partners, and Blockfence.
Another scam every day.
The scammer then targeted the @EthereumDenver website. Blockfence is here for you to protect yourself and fight scammers together. The scam contract was marked “High Risk” by our ML algorithm, our partners and at @GoplusSecurity pic.twitter.com/Jdtoz2Bgu4— Blockfence (@blockfence_io). February 20, 2023
- ETH Denver also has a Twitter account. issued A warning about the fake website.
- Phishing is a serious threat. Phishing is a serious threat. Experts are not always safe, even though they are more vulnerable than those with less experience in key management.
- Contrary to popular belief, RTFKT’s COO Nikhil Gopalani (a man with extensive experience in the field) was recently hacked. He lost hundreds of thousands dollars worth of NFTs.