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July 2023 Bitcoin scams
come in many different forms. Scammers use different platforms to try and get
people to pay them in bitcoin (also known as cryptocurrency or digital money).
Bitcoin scams are a popular way for fraudsters to trick people into sending
money. Recently, they used Twitter and some of its most notable accounts to
target Twitter users. On July 15,
hackers compromised verified Twitter accounts and sent
cryptocurrency scam tweets requesting bitcoin donations with the promise of
doubling the investments to “give back to the community.” Scammers responsible
for bitcoin scams not only aim to steal people’s money, but also collect their personally identifiable information
(PII) and sell it to other cybercriminals. According to Twitter, attackers are believed to have targeted
certain Twitter employees through a social engineering scheme. Twitter says the
attackers successfully manipulated a small number of employees and used their
credentials to access Twitter’s internal systems, including getting through
their two-factor protections. While Twitter continues their forensic review,
they believe the bad actors may have attempted to sell some of the usernames.
The hackers are not believed to have viewed previous account passwords.
However, they were able to view personal information, including email addresses
and phone numbers. Twitter says
nearly 130 accounts were targeted, and 45 successfully hacked. The Twitter
accounts hacked include high profile individuals with verified accounts such as
Barak Obama, Kanye West, Elon Musk and Bill Gates. Twitter responded by preventing any blue-check marked
accounts from tweeting while security teams responded to
the attack. Twitter apologized for the attack; the UK’s National Cyber Security
Center, whom Twitter officers reached out to for support, released a statement
urging people to treat requests for money or PII on social media with extreme
caution. The recent
social-engineering hijack of Twitter accounts highlights a larger issue that
has been on the increase since COVID-19 began: the prevalence of cryptocurrency scams.
According to the Federal Trade Commission,
most bitcoin scams appear as emails trying to blackmail someone, online
chain-referral schemes or bogus investment/business opportunities. However, no
matter how the scam is executed, a scammer wants the victim to either send
money, give-up their PII or a combination of these. Once someone engages, there
is usually nothing they can do to get their money back. The Twitter hack
creates a teachable moment – what should consumers do to reduce their risk of
falling for a bitcoin scam? It also highlights the need for businesses to
ensure their employees are educated on social engineering.
This incident proves that even the most technologically-advanced companies are
not immune from an employee granting access to bad actors. To avoid a bitcoin scam or
other forms of social
engineering, people should remember the following:
If someone believes they are a victim of a bitcoin scam or has questions about other scams, they can live-chat with an Identity Theft Resource Center expert advisor. They can also call toll-free at 888.400.5530. |
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