Title: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: dkbit98 on January 28, 2025, 03:35:24 PM Word of warning to everyone who is using Trezor devices, watch out for new wave of scam attempts!
I just received email that I should update my Trezor and ''enhance my security with secure ease''. Luckily I learned my lesson long timr ago and I don't click any links, even if they are legit, before I check them. This is the hidden website I was redirected to go: Code: lap-log.com You can see it was created by someone from Jakarta, Indonesia: Code: Domain Name: LAP-LOG.COM This is the content of phsihing email I received from fake trezor, and it came from email address secureeasy@no-reply.aplicant.ch https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/01/28/WOegl.jpeg Don't fall for stupid scam like this, don't blindly click link, and only update Trezor from official sources. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Ojima-ojo on January 28, 2025, 04:19:23 PM Word of warning to everyone who is using Trezor devices, watch out for new wave of scam attempts! The thing is if you verify the email you will discover that that message is not from Trezor's official email also we need to be constantly on the lookout for phishing emails to I don't reply to emails if I don't request for it, to be at the safer side, a lot of time, many that fall for this kind of scam did not do their due diligence checks and their lack the knowledge to spot the red flags just like you did.I just received email that I should update my Trezor and ''enhance my security with secure ease''. Luckily I learned my lesson long timr ago and I don't click any links, even if they are legit, before I check them. Thank you for bringing this up here! Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: un_rank on January 28, 2025, 05:04:11 PM The email address is such a big teller in this case, I wonder if there are actually people who can fall for a scam like this.
It always helps to stop, take a breath and think before you act. Acting in a haste will very likely lead you to make a mistake and can lead to losses. - Jay - Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: batang_bitcoin on January 28, 2025, 05:07:15 PM This scam attempt also happens in Ledger users, I think the same tactic is being done and they want the users of both hardware wallets to direct into the phishing site that they are attaching at that email. If someone is new and have read this kind of message, they'll blindly click it and more likely to input the seeds that they'll ask through that link. If there is no form, they might require victims to download malware.
Thanks for this reminder OP. The email address is such a big teller in this case, I wonder if there are actually people who can fall for a scam like this. Sadly there will still be victims of it and that's why they never stop in attempting.Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: promise444c5 on January 28, 2025, 08:52:04 PM The email address is such a big teller in this case, I wonder if there are actually people who can fall for a scam like this. Sure there would, he knew just from experience(as he mentioned above) and he has the knowledge about it, what about someone with just basic knowledge of just holding Bitcoin On their HW wallets.Good that he is creating the awareness because the template design looks pretty much convincing at first glance, I don't know how trezor email templates looks like but they must have tried to immitate it... the sent out could even be in bulks, hopefully this save someone. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Davidvictorson on January 28, 2025, 10:01:37 PM The email address is such a big teller in this case, I wonder if there are actually people who can fall for a scam like this. The sense of urgency in the email is a factor that will make people fall for the scam. Another factor is that people don't read to understand so they miss the details and so fall for the scam. Quote It always helps to stop, take a breath and think before you act. Acting in a haste will very likely lead you to make a mistake and can lead to losses. Thinking before the actual act is the hardest thing to do in that instance. It seems people just lose their sense of thinking and they feel like at that moment they are in competition with other people to click on the link first to get some reward and this is also what leads to losses as well. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: dkbit98 on January 29, 2025, 09:28:43 PM The email address is such a big teller in this case, I wonder if there are actually people who can fall for a scam like this. Sure they can, or they would not release new scams all the time.They intentionally used this email address because they included the same words into trezor page as part of their service. I saw scammers using punnycodes and making very similar domains and emails, so they are trying different things to scam people. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: libert19 on February 01, 2025, 08:53:46 AM 'dear user' is red flag. Although, writing is pretty decent compared to usual scam mails.
By the way, what are you asked to do upon clicking link? Are you asked to enter seed? Couple years ago, I followed one such mail and it dawned me only later that it was phishing mail when it asked me to enter seed. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Judith87403 on February 01, 2025, 01:29:24 PM Word of warning to everyone who is using Trezor devices, watch out for new wave of scam attempts! I just received email that I should update my Trezor and ''enhance my security with secure ease''. Luckily I learned my lesson long timr ago and I don't click any links, even if they are legit, before I check them. This is the hidden website I was redirected to go: Code: lap-log.com You can see it was created by someone from Jakarta, Indonesia: Code: Domain Name: LAP-LOG.COM This is the content of phsihing email I received from fake trezor, and it came from email address secureeasy@no-reply.aplicant.ch https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/01/28/WOegl.jpeg Don't fall for stupid scam like this, don't blindly click link, and only update Trezor from official sources. Thank you so much for your information is actually a nice one, More especially for those that start using the internet recently we need to be extremely careful so as to avoid being a victim to them. Of course clicking an unknown link is very risky because their are some links you will click probably after clicking the Link you will start experience some difficulties in login in your account, I have seen it happening countless time. And also being careful with the kind of site we join that will involve putting our email because thier intention might be just to get access to our email which is why we need to be very careful with those malicious site. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Saint-loup on February 01, 2025, 06:21:23 PM Fortunately, the phishing website doesn't seem to be online anymore. Anyway it would be interesting to know how they've been able to get OP's email and how they've been able to know he was using a Trezor hardwallet. Is it a breach from Trezor or they've been able to guess from other sources of informations? Anwyway it's concerning for other Trezor's customers.
https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/02/01/eCqMv.png Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: un_rank on February 01, 2025, 06:44:19 PM ... Anyway it would be interesting to know how they've been able to get OP's email and how they've been able to know he was using a Trezor hardwallet. Is it a breach from Trezor or they've been able to guess from other sources of informations? There was a phishing attack affecting Trezor some months back which led to potential email leaks of thousands of users and that would have been sold repeatedly in the black market and could be the reason why Op got that mail. It could also be a random email to lots of people with the hope that some of them will be Trezor users.- Jay - Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: BitMaxz on February 01, 2025, 07:54:20 PM Newbies are easy to fall into this kind of phishing attack if I am the one who receive it first thing that I need to check is the email who sent it.
On the first glance in the email "secureeasy@no-reply.aplicant.ch" it shows that it came from an unknown source, meaning that is the first red flag and the second red flag is by checking the link or the site; if ever, just copy the link from the email and then use a redirect checker, or WhereGoes should provide you details where it will go if it redirects to an unknown site that's a red flag. I tried to check this email, and according to Google, .ch domain are officially domains of Switzerland, so maybe the info from the site is fake and the scammer is not living in Jakarta but in Switzerland. What do you think? I got the same thing when trying to access it using browsling it seems they changed something on the backend, or maybe the site is accessible only in selected countries only? Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: dkbit98 on February 03, 2025, 06:43:39 PM Fortunately, the phishing website doesn't seem to be online anymore. Anyway it would be interesting to know how they've been able to get OP's email and how they've been able to know he was using a Trezor hardwallet. Is it a breach from Trezor or they've been able to guess from other sources of informations? Anwyway it's concerning for other Trezor's customers. I used one of my temp email addresses just for receiving news and updates from Trezor newsletter, so this is not connected with my personal information at all.It's interesting that few days ago I also received email from official Trezor about canceling my purchase of their new Freedom Edition device, even if never actually tried to make that purchase. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Aanuoluwatofunmi on February 03, 2025, 08:54:29 PM I used one of my temp email addresses just for receiving news and updates from Trezor newsletter, so this is not connected with my personal information at all. It's interesting that few days ago I also received email from official Trezor about canceling my purchase of their new Freedom Edition device, even if never actually tried to make that purchase. This is weird, i never expect to see trezor being their next target, am sire this cannot be coming from them, but the hackers are very smart at impersonation, in situations whereby they make it looks as if you're talking to the official intended platform they have hacked, now this is where we put into practice what we have learnt about crypto, it security measure and how we should not be too greedy in believing upon everything we received online, some could be detestable by us, and in some cases, we may have to verify the authenticity of the information received because taking action, just imagine you winning something you never applied for, how possible, this is where some never pay attention to as loopholes before falling for it. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: BABY SHOES on February 03, 2025, 09:24:00 PM Surprised that this phishing site was created by someone from my own country (Indonesia) Jakarta is the capital city of... So it's very sad to listen to it. :(
Maybe these scammers have gotten a lot of emails from leaked data or purchased data and then spread the phishing site as if it is legitimate from the original Trezor. Even if you don't receive this email, you will still be vigilant to check the details to avoid making the same mistake. Thanks for sharing. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: albon on February 04, 2025, 07:45:23 PM I used one of my temp email addresses just for receiving news and updates from Trezor newsletter, so this is not connected with my personal information at all. This is an important tip for beginners, which is that when subscribing to the newsletter and promotions, they can use a dedicated email for this, whether when purchasing a wallet from Trezor or any other company. Indeed, MailChimp, which is the platform responsible for marketing newsletters to Trezor customers via email, was breached three years ago [Source (https://blog.trezor.io/ongoing-phishing-attacks-on-trezor-users-edd840b17304)], which led to the database of many customers’ emails being exposed and receiving these phishing sites. Therefore, beginners should know that Trezor only sends messages from email addresses that end with @trezor.io or @satoshilabs.com. Any suspicious phishing websites can be easily reported to their team at <security@ trezor.io> to have them taken down. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Alphakilo on February 04, 2025, 08:49:37 PM Surprised that this phishing site was created by someone from my own country (Indonesia) Jakarta is the capital city of... So it's very sad to listen to it. :( These scams originate from different countries worldwide including the western countries. Do not feel sad about it. The will continue to be people who are not as patrioitic as you are and will do everything to ruin the image of their countries. It is easy to even get leaked data or purchased data nowadays. If they send more emails there will be at least two people who falls it. Those are the ones that wll not be able to tell an original from a fake Trezor. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: adultcrypto on February 04, 2025, 09:40:27 PM Thanks for sharing this information, it is so helpful because people can easily fall for this scam. But I feel the scam is actually armature because a careful analysis of the setup will easily reveal this to be a scam. Let me ask, will the only way to consider such update be when the prompt is coming from within the application itself or from the official repository? I'm asking because scammers are becoming too sophisticated and it is looking extremely difficult knowing what to trust now.
Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: BABY SHOES on February 04, 2025, 10:28:13 PM Surprised that this phishing site was created by someone from my own country (Indonesia) Jakarta is the capital city of... So it's very sad to listen to it. :( These scams originate from different countries worldwide including the western countries. Do not feel sad about it. The will continue to be people who are not as patrioitic as you are and will do everything to ruin the image of their countries. It is easy to even get leaked data or purchased data nowadays. If they send more emails there will be at least two people who falls it. Those are the ones that wll not be able to tell an original from a fake Trezor. Imagine the hundreds of emails that were sent with this false information... and they managed to get a victim from phishing through this email maybe the scammers have made a profit. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: dkbit98 on July 25, 2025, 05:01:44 PM Beware everyone, here goes another fake Trezor emails sent by scammers!
This time they are claiming some vulnerability and patch needed for critical secure update, but that is malware so don't click or download anything. Email was sent from interesting address: Code: info@car.com.au https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/07/25/UAxaJC.jpeg SCAM! Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Pablo-wood on July 25, 2025, 06:54:00 PM ... Scammers seems to have one common language, they always claim there is critical vulnerability or urgent updates making people feel it is a secure update and people with little or no experience about phishing links just fall for this. Email was sent from interesting address: This doesn't look official at all. The scammer is still a learner. Maybe the Idea was to try out something new he or she learnt.Code: info@car.com.au Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: uchegod-21 on July 25, 2025, 07:35:16 PM Beware everyone, here goes another fake Trezor emails sent by scammers! Mere looking at this email, I could spot the error in the mail. Any experienced person can easily spot this, but the concern is on newbies. There is more to investing in crypto than just making profits from it. Newbies are usually the main targets because of their poor knowledge of crypto and wallet security. This time they are claiming some vulnerability and patch needed for critical secure update, but that is malware so don't click or download anything. Email was sent from interesting address: Code: info@car.com.au https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/07/25/UAxaJC.jpeg SCAM! This is why I will advice those investors and traders who are already in the system to always let newbies they mentor know these things. Many newbies are scared of volatility and losing their private keys, they don't know that having to deal with scammers is the worst of it all. Everything they worked hard for can vanish in the twinkle of an eye. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: dkbit98 on August 04, 2025, 08:06:17 PM I again received a bunch of SCAM trezor emails again, and all coming from different addresses.
I saved content of this messages, and this could be a good learning example for new members. All emails had Trezor or Satoshi Labs in title, but coming from different sources. NEVER click on any links or buttons! https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/08/04/UHgQ33.jpeg https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/08/04/UHgCS8.jpeg https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/08/04/UHgZpZ.jpeg Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: $crypto$ on August 04, 2025, 08:17:52 PM Beware everyone, here goes another fake Trezor emails sent by scammers! Today I received a fake email from Trezor with a different message text.This time they are claiming some vulnerability and patch needed for critical secure update, but that is malware so don't click or download anything. Email was sent from interesting address: Code: info@car.com.au https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/07/25/UAxaJC.jpeg SCAM! With them saying this protocol security advice from Trezor is just a hoax. So you have to be vigilant sometimes emails like this come several times. Code: noreply@gant.com Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: PX-Z on August 04, 2025, 08:50:31 PM Today I received a fake email from Trezor with a different message text. Any hardware wallet update sent via email should automatically be treated as spam or a scam attempt. Updates should never be delivered this way, as it's a common tactic used by hackers to lure users into downloading malicious software or revealing their recovery phrases. Always update your hardware wallet only through the official app or website, and double-check URLs for authenticity.With them saying this protocol security advice from Trezor is just a hoax. So you have to be vigilant sometimes emails like this come several times. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Nwada001 on August 06, 2025, 10:58:57 PM I again received a bunch of SCAM trezor emails again, and all coming from different addresses. This mail could either just be coming from one person or a group of persons who have your mail address and that of others, and they have just been loading them with different types of scam mail using the same method but with different content just for it to pass the email spam filter and land in the inbox. I think your old mail might have been exposed somehow, just like my old mail, which is a bedroom for scam/spam mail. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Potato Chips on August 06, 2025, 11:59:04 PM These scammers have spammed my old email as well lol.
I think mine started on June. Thankfully, it appears they have slowed down on my end as it wasn't as often as before. I see recent ones straight to my spam folder too which help the annoyance up to a certain extent. It's the classic incite a sense of urgency tactic, hence the "security incident" I just checked the email I used to order trezor HW years ago, and found I've been getting spammed LOL. I looked into it, and they're all scams that request folks to install malicious firmware updates as well. https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/06/29/UuD5I3.png I'd say at some point, everyone will encounter malicious emails. So one way or another, we gotta learn how to separate genuine from scams. All these reference threads about it should come in handy. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Kelward on August 07, 2025, 07:11:35 AM ... Scammers seems to have one common language, they always claim there is critical vulnerability or urgent updates making people feel it is a secure update and people with little or no experience about phishing links just fall for this. Email was sent from interesting address: This doesn't look official at all. The scammer is still a learner. Maybe the Idea was to try out something new he or she learnt.Code: info@car.com.au Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: apogio on August 08, 2025, 06:21:17 AM Ok, I think it's getting way out of hand, isn't it? I am seriously tired of these scam attempts. I 've received 7 emails since July 31st.
List of emails (so that you can put them in your filter list before they reach you): - trezor [at] unroyal [dot] com - noreply [at] scramnetwork [dot] com - no-reply [at] cashio[dot] net - noreply [at] bumc [dot] net - noreply [at] viscosityna [dot] net - support [at] performitiv [dot] com - noreply [at] lifebeyondlimits [dot] com [dot] au Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Alvin_talk on August 09, 2025, 08:05:20 PM The email address is such a big teller in this case, I wonder if there are actually people who can fall for a scam like this. It always helps to stop, take a breath and think before you act. Acting in a haste will very likely lead you to make a mistake and can lead to losses. - Jay - Yes, you are correct the email is a big teller but if you are having a very busy day with so much activities and these scammers sends you an email you might just mistakenly click the link and the rest will be stories. I think being alert and aware at all time is the only possible solution to this. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Outhue on August 10, 2025, 07:36:18 AM I have two different hardware wallets and I've never received email about an update before, even if it's possible I won't go through the mail to update the devices, the official website is where the real answer lies. In this days you can't trust any email or messages online, even if the email looks like it's from official source it still can't be trusted, always verify on the official website, usually it's strange if they notify users via email for an update.
Mails are compromised when it comes to attacks, don't always complete a task through them because it can also be a inside job that looks like an attack among the team too, just because the email is from original source doesn't mean you should perform anything they asked you to, mainly when it's about your hardware wallet. There are many stupid scams online that I can never be a victim and this is one of them. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: dkbit98 on August 11, 2025, 08:46:33 PM Ok, I think it's getting way out of hand, isn't it? I am seriously tired of these scam attempts. I 've received 7 emails since July 31st. I received a bunch of this emails, but that was my test email address that is not connected with any of my personal information ;)It's better to use temp emails or dedicated email aliases to avoid or reduce getting bombarded with phishing scam emails. My suggestion is to avoid purchasing any hardware wallet online with your main email address, and it's even better if you can purchase it in physical store with cash or with BTC. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: apogio on August 11, 2025, 09:19:29 PM I received a bunch of this emails, but that was my test email address that is not connected with any of my personal information ;) It's better to use temp emails or dedicated email aliases to avoid or reduce getting bombarded with phishing scam emails. My suggestion is to avoid purchasing any hardware wallet online with your main email address, and it's even better if you can purchase it in physical store with cash or with BTC. You are definitely right. I used an email that’s not my primary nor secondary but it’s one I use sometimes. But I should have used a one-time email for this purpose. Anyway, for the next time… By the way, do we have any info about how they have scraped our emails? Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: dkbit98 on August 12, 2025, 07:32:35 PM By the way, do we have any info about how they have scraped our emails? If I remember correctly Terzor email newsletter got hacked a while ago (they used third party partner), that is how they got most email addresses, but they don't have other personal information.There could be other ways for them to get emails, especially if same address was used to anything related with crypto. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: NotATether on August 17, 2025, 03:04:27 AM Just block it in your /etc/hosts file (Windows users - it's located in a subfolder of System32 - Unfortunately I don't exactly remember which one, but it has a similar structure).
I'm sure the hosts file will fill up like this though, so maybe it would be time to run a Pi-hole and stop the phishing at the network layer. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: nakamura12 on August 18, 2025, 09:52:43 PM I have noticed that there are many topics about hardware wallets are being used to steal or to scam people off of their crypto funds. I think it's what scammers used nowadays according to the topics about hardware wallet popping up. I think those who mostly use those wallets should be very careful about what they do to avoid something bad from happening and losing crypto that people have stored for quite some time.
Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: Ojima-ojo on August 18, 2025, 10:42:05 PM Today I received a fake email from Trezor with a different message text. Any hardware wallet update sent via email should automatically be treated as spam or a scam attempt. Updates should never be delivered this way, as it's a common tactic used by hackers to lure users into downloading malicious software or revealing their recovery phrases. Always update your hardware wallet only through the official app or website, and double-check URLs for authenticity.With them saying this protocol security advice from Trezor is just a hoax. So you have to be vigilant sometimes emails like this come several times. Why the heck about anyone take email update seriously, when you did not request for it, between luckily that the mate is smart enough to notice and raise his concerns here. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: PX-Z on August 18, 2025, 11:12:10 PM Why the heck about anyone take email update seriously, when you did not request for it, between luckily that the mate is smart enough to notice and raise his concerns here. Honestly speaking, there are still people get victimized on this regardless the warnings given of the platform or any anti-phishing campaign in the internet. Idk how these user (victims) minds works whenever they receive such emails. Even double checking the url of the site if its correct, leads to confusions and unfortunately, end up losing its funds on those wallets or account.Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: aoluain on August 30, 2025, 11:42:46 AM By the way, do we have any info about how they have scraped our emails? If I remember correctly Terzor email newsletter got hacked a while ago (they used third party partner), that is how they got most email addresses, but they don't have other personal information.There could be other ways for them to get emails, especially if same address was used to anything related with crypto. If that was the case its really bad form on the part of Trezor. Their whole mantra and business model is centred around security and privacy but in this case they are happy to use a "third party". The biggst selling point of Trezor is to not use a third party to store our coins and its precisely the reason we use their product in the first place - to avoid using a third party. As a Trezor user I'm not impressed and I cant understand how a tech company would have to use a outside service? https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/08/30/UnUMFq.jpeg Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: KiaKia on September 07, 2025, 11:37:58 AM Word of warning to everyone who is using Trezor devices, watch out for new wave of scam attempts! The thing is if you verify the email you will discover that that message is not from Trezor's official email also we need to be constantly on the lookout for phishing emails to I don't reply to emails if I don't request for it, to be at the safer side, a lot of time, many that fall for this kind of scam did not do their due diligence checks and their lack the knowledge to spot the red flags just like you did.I just received email that I should update my Trezor and ''enhance my security with secure ease''. Luckily I learned my lesson long timr ago and I don't click any links, even if they are legit, before I check them. Thank you for bringing this up here! The only way this scam can maybe be effective is if these scammers have the right email address of all people that actually own a trezor device, if I am sent this mail now I will just laugh it out because i never own any trezor device. I saw similar trick but with Ledger hardware wallet and I don't own one either lol, this is the fastest way that these scammers are shooting themselves in the legs, they form email address and sent the messages out or maybe they have email filters but the fact remains, there is no way to know how really owns a Trezor device. All this drama is about having common sense, to update the firmware of any hardware devices this days it has to be done via the official website, teams will never send you any clickable link through email. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: uchegod-21 on September 07, 2025, 07:03:48 PM Word of warning to everyone who is using Trezor devices, watch out for new wave of scam attempts! The thing is if you verify the email you will discover that that message is not from Trezor's official email also we need to be constantly on the lookout for phishing emails to I don't reply to emails if I don't request for it, to be at the safer side, a lot of time, many that fall for this kind of scam did not do their due diligence checks and their lack the knowledge to spot the red flags just like you did.I just received email that I should update my Trezor and ''enhance my security with secure ease''. Luckily I learned my lesson long timr ago and I don't click any links, even if they are legit, before I check them. Thank you for bringing this up here! The only way this scam can maybe be effective is if these scammers have the right email address of all people that actually own a trezor device, if I am sent this mail now I will just laugh it out because i never own any trezor device. I saw similar trick but with Ledger hardware wallet and I don't own one either lol, this is the fastest way that these scammers are shooting themselves in the legs, they form email address and sent the messages out or maybe they have email filters but the fact remains, there is no way to know how really owns a Trezor device. All this drama is about having common sense, to update the firmware of any hardware devices this days it has to be done via the official website, teams will never send you any clickable link through email. I see no reason why anyone should fall for these kind of scam when they clearly do not own a Trezor device. That is pure stupidity. Title: Re: Another Trezor Scam Attempt! Post by: pawanjain on September 08, 2025, 03:06:30 PM ...and you think that these scammers don't also send these messages to those who actually own Trezor devices? Their major victims are these guys who own Trezor devices because everything seems so real, only the observant people will be able to spot even the most insignificant differences that shows that such emails are not genuine. Scammers are smart these days, they have their ways of getting access to people's data; emails ain't one difficult thing they can't access. I see no reason why anyone should fall for these kind of scam when they clearly do not own a Trezor device. That is pure stupidity. Exactly. The scammers can send this phishing mail to a large userbase consisting of Trezor as well as non-trezor users. The ones who don't own a trezor device will obviously not fall for this mail and will either delete it or report it. On the other hand, those who are indeed trezor users might skip a beat for a second. If they are not careful about the mail they might just fall for it. This is why we should be very careful when we click on any links we see on our mails. It's better to just hover over any link and be sure of the link we are clicking on. |