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Twitter Scams Are Getting Out of Hand

Scam Society Twitter
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Journalist
Journalist
Sead Fadilpašić
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Sead specializes in writing factual and informative articles to help the public navigate the ever-changing world of crypto. He has extensive experience in the blockchain industry, where he has served...

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Crypto Twitter is packed with landmines – from verified accounts scamming to those making up a whole personality for the people they’re impersonating, and people are falling for it.

Source: iStock/natasaadzic

For example, Chris Burniske, a partner at Placeholder, a New York venture firm that specializes in cryptoassets, recently tweeted about how developers are flooding into crypto despite recent lows and general FUD being spread. His tweet was immediately followed up by an impersonator claiming to be giving away BTC.

Burniske is far from being the only one to have fallen victim to brazen impersonation. Many well-known (and not that famous) crypto people, from Vitalik Buterin, a co-founder of the Ethereum platform, to initial coin offerings (ICOs) accounts, have added “Not Giving Away ETH/BTC” into their Twitter names. This is no deterrent for scammers: there are those imitating them so well that they add the same sentence into their own names – while simultaneously offering “free crypto.”

The transition from original account to scammer is almost seamless: the scammers often reply to a tweet by the real account, referencing something that has been said and adding things like, “Meanwhile, don’t forget about our giveaway!” However, their handles are getting increasingly bizarre, often simply a string of senseless alphanumeric characters.

And nobody is safe: it is not just developers and entrepreneurs being targeted. A number of journalists have their own Twitter doppelgangers as well. The reason for this, it must be presumed, is their large following – out of 10,000 people, someone is, unfortunately, bound to fall for this trick.

Meanwhile, there are scammers calling out other scammers, making Twitter accounts seem more personal than the original ones, and now the sign of “making it” in the crypto space is having people imitate you. What a time to be alive.

Keep in mind that there is no such thing as free money – if someone asks you to send them an amount so they can send you even more, it’s a scam. Stay safe!

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