A community website set up against XRP scam owners has been taking over 8.5 million tokens on YouTube since 2019. A fake YouTube channel that uses the image of Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, in the video mentions a fake airdrop that provides viewers with up to 50 million XRP giveaway, urged viewers to send 5,000 XRP - 1,000,000 XRP to an address listed on the video with the promise of a 5x return.
The Ripple community, also known as the Ripple Army, has sent over 8.5 million XRP for fake airdrops and "XRP giveaway" scams on YouTube in the past year, according to the website xrplorer.com
The XRP data aggregator "xrplorer", which is still in beta, reported on Twitter on April 23, saying that these scamers withdrew 6 million tokens in 2019 and sent them to related addresses. other officials. They also reported nearly three million victims of scammers by 2020
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