Bitcoin Forum
June 22, 2024, 05:08:08 AM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.0 [Torrent]
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Pages: « 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 »  All
  Print  
Author Topic: HOW TO protect yourself from Scammers  (Read 3929 times)
dongosquad
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 588
Merit: 101



View Profile
May 12, 2018, 06:21:20 PM
 #61

Related to the number of airdrop program, before joining make sure first that the project actually held an airdrop program with asking via official telegram or social media. It's a very precise preventive action. One more thing, avoid the airdrop program that requires sending some money to get it.

OIKOS.CASH      Decentralized finance on Tron   ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬   Collateral-backed stable-coins
         github  telegram    twitter    discord           synthetic asset trading and trustless token exchange on TRON
Nolivelasco13
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 65
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 14, 2018, 12:43:55 PM
 #62

it's easy for you to scam if you're offered to invest or pay for a profit making
hamim18
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 51
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 24, 2018, 06:52:25 AM
 #63

If you receive a phone call offering you an easy way to use bitcoin to get rich quick, hang up. It’s probably too good to be true. The Federal Trade Commission announced Friday that it recently got a court order that stopped four men who were accused of duping people in scams focused around cryptocurrencies, or encrypted digital money.
Odlanyer
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 350
Merit: 10


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 10:32:37 AM
 #64

All we know the're many scammers sowing the gloom in bitcoin world all we need to do is to make sure that your bitcoin are safe to don't lose your bitcoin.
Fourgh
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 196
Merit: 10


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 10:36:08 AM
 #65

I was making a list for my team on how to stay away from Crypto scammers, and thought I would just share it here as well.

Here are the type of Crypto scammers that I have encountered

Type 1. ICO as a SCAM - (More info contributed by: tosindesign)
There are ICOs that are only designed to get your money. Once the ICO is over then the pages are taken off the net and the makers of the ICO disappear with the money. The last case we reported was LoopX, but this is not the only case.

How can you protect yourself?
1. (by: tosindesign) Generally there is no 100% protection here. A good indication for a scam is there is no team mentioned on the website or whitepaper. Although everything is very superficial and promised a lot, but after reading the white paper is not clear how that should be possible.
2. (by: GeckoTrader) One of the best things to do to avoid ICO scamming is to learn and back read all information about that ICO. As they always say " More knowledge is power"
3. (by: GeckoTrader) The team should have been communicating to the community.
4. (by: GeckoTrader) Always they should have an update from their company. If you sense something fishy do not hesitate to ask question from them. In that means you can confirm whether they are legit or just a bunch of scammers.

Type 2. Scammers who sell FAKE COINS (name / coin code is same but coin generating contract is different)
How to protect yourself: Check the contract address of these coins, if it came from the same contract address

Type 3. Social media scammers - Would post like "I will send you 50 ETH if you send me 5"
How to protect yourself: This is an easy one, they all are scammers. Dont even respond.

Type 4: Identity theft scammers - These guys will contact you as CEOs of ICOs or Social celebrities, usually banking upon the names of a famous person
How to protect yourself: Try pinging them from an another ID of theirs (say if scammer pinged you from Telegram, drop them a message over their facebook ID) and ask them to check that message. This would work as a Two-Factor-Authentication for that personality.

Type 5: Malicious code Trojans - Like Wordpress or Chrome plugins, that would use your machine to mine for crypto currencies, using your machine for the same
How to protect yourself: Try not to do plugins or replace them with cloud powered services, OR, Install only trusted plugins, with loads of reviews maybe. I wont be surprised if these trojans take shape of free downloadable games or cracked softwares downloadable for desktop or your mobile.

Type 6: Online Seed Generators (contributed by: tosindesign)
For some wallets (eg the IOTA Wallet) you have to set your own seed. In the case of IOTA, this is an 81-digit password that must consist of uppercase letters and at least one 9. Since some did not want to generate a password themselves, they resorted to online seed generators. These generate you by mouse click an 81-digit seed. However, as it turns out later, a few of these seed generators also stored the generated passwords, The stored seeds were then later used to steal the assets of the investors concerned. You have to know that the seed is something like the master key that allows all credits to be transferred. A thief does not even have to have access to your computer on which the wallet is installed. The seed is enough to access your balance on another computer.

How can you protect yourself?
Never use an online seed generator! When generating an 81-digit seed, all you have to do is push 81 random keys on your keyboard.

Type 7: Phishing website attempts (contributed by: tosindesign)
Scammers would copy exact replica of the websites (wallets, exchanges) and try to get you to login, thereby recording you password. For example, the page Blockchain.info was copied to get the logins. You have to know that Blockchain.info also offers a wallet service where Wallet could save your bitcoins. If Google users searched for “Blockchain info” in some countries, they ran a Google ad that led to Blockchaina.info, a cheat site that has nothing to do with Blockchain.info. The site was a 1: 1 copy of Blockchain.info and was only designed to get login information from users. There are also similar attempts to MyEtherwallet.com and other sites.

How can you protect yourself?
Never click anywhere on a link to a page where you want to log in. The best way is to bookmark the pages and just go over the web pages. In addition, you should always look for the SSL encryption. There will not be a page that stores important data from you and is located at http: //. All pages should now be encrypted SSL and have a https: // domain (although the pages can also be accessed at http: // they will redirect to https: //). The SSL certificates will also show you every browser, for example by a small lock symbol.


Type 9: Used Ledger Nano (contributed by: tosindesign)
At ebay and in other marketplaces there are always offers to buy the Ledger Nano a bit cheaper. This is particularly interesting now, where the Ledger Nano S is sold out and will be available again in one month. There have been cases in the past when users bought a used ledger on ebay and the seed from the ledger was already filled out. Anyone who has not owned a ledger to date will hardly register the difference. Of course, the previous owners have also noted the seed in these cases, which then allows them to get access to the crypto currencies that the new owner stores on the Ledger Nano S.  

How can you protect yourself?
If you want to use a hardware wallet like the Ledger Nano S, buy it directly from the manufacturer and make sure that it is still original packed. The enclosed note on which you can write down the seed should never be filled.

Type 10: Airdrops that ask for personal information (contributed by: StarKay)
There are hyped up airdrops that may ask for KYC information, that may end up being used by scammers / hackers.

How to protect yourself:
Think of your personal information as an investment as well. Research who you are giving your information to and why that ICO will need it

Type 11: Identity theft via Social Media - (contributed by: darkangel11)
You have to realize what they want from you. In the end it's always your money, while in the process they may want some personal data, a phone number, whatever they can get into.

How to protect yourself: Never willingly give anything. Don't share your real social media accounts with random people, keep your email addresses to yourself and if you have to use them make sure to have burner emails. What are burners? Not necessarily emails created for every forum and project. Just emails that don't contain your personal data and that you're not using for online shopping, banking and so on.

Please add more below, or share your story.



thanks for the information Sir, really learned a lot from this. What you wrote is true. It's really hard to filter scams this days. Sad

juiceannabel
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 224
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 01:16:08 PM
 #66

Awesome information in this thread. i read and now i have knowledge how to select ICO.
many scam icos already scam many investors. And i think we must do our own research before joining any ICOs.
kucritt
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 616
Merit: 100



View Profile
May 26, 2018, 01:37:51 PM
 #67

wow its a nice thread, to make people in this forum is safe from scam and scammers, i agree with your statement, the best way to step away from ICO scam is see the team and roadmap, it there are anything that doesn't make sense i think that is a bad proejct and just a scam proejct

Baimovic
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 1210
Merit: 100



View Profile
May 26, 2018, 01:45:04 PM
 #68

wow its a nice thread, to make people in this forum is safe from scam and scammers, i agree with your statement, the best way to step away from ICO scam is see the team and roadmap, it there are anything that doesn't make sense i think that is a bad proejct and just a scam proejct
I add a little, i think the team also must cooperate with the advisor. because I often get ICO scams because the team does not have an advisor. such as symmetry and also altowl ICO.

yanixbtc
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 154
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 01:50:17 PM
 #69

I was making a list for my team on how to stay away from Crypto scammers, and thought I would just share it here as well.

Here are the type of Crypto scammers that I have encountered

Type 1. ICO as a SCAM - (More info contributed by: tosindesign)
There are ICOs that are only designed to get your money. Once the ICO is over then the pages are taken off the net and the makers of the ICO disappear with the money. The last case we reported was LoopX, but this is not the only case.

How can you protect yourself?
1. (by: tosindesign) Generally there is no 100% protection here. A good indication for a scam is there is no team mentioned on the website or whitepaper. Although everything is very superficial and promised a lot, but after reading the white paper is not clear how that should be possible.
2. (by: GeckoTrader) One of the best things to do to avoid ICO scamming is to learn and back read all information about that ICO. As they always say " More knowledge is power"
3. (by: GeckoTrader) The team should have been communicating to the community.
4. (by: GeckoTrader) Always they should have an update from their company. If you sense something fishy do not hesitate to ask question from them. In that means you can confirm whether they are legit or just a bunch of scammers.

Type 2. Scammers who sell FAKE COINS (name / coin code is same but coin generating contract is different)
How to protect yourself: Check the contract address of these coins, if it came from the same contract address

Type 3. Social media scammers - Would post like "I will send you 50 ETH if you send me 5"
How to protect yourself: This is an easy one, they all are scammers. Dont even respond.

Type 4: Identity theft scammers - These guys will contact you as CEOs of ICOs or Social celebrities, usually banking upon the names of a famous person
How to protect yourself: Try pinging them from an another ID of theirs (say if scammer pinged you from Telegram, drop them a message over their facebook ID) and ask them to check that message. This would work as a Two-Factor-Authentication for that personality.

Type 5: Malicious code Trojans - Like Wordpress or Chrome plugins, that would use your machine to mine for crypto currencies, using your machine for the same
How to protect yourself: Try not to do plugins or replace them with cloud powered services, OR, Install only trusted plugins, with loads of reviews maybe. I wont be surprised if these trojans take shape of free downloadable games or cracked softwares downloadable for desktop or your mobile.

Type 6: Online Seed Generators (contributed by: tosindesign)
For some wallets (eg the IOTA Wallet) you have to set your own seed. In the case of IOTA, this is an 81-digit password that must consist of uppercase letters and at least one 9. Since some did not want to generate a password themselves, they resorted to online seed generators. These generate you by mouse click an 81-digit seed. However, as it turns out later, a few of these seed generators also stored the generated passwords, The stored seeds were then later used to steal the assets of the investors concerned. You have to know that the seed is something like the master key that allows all credits to be transferred. A thief does not even have to have access to your computer on which the wallet is installed. The seed is enough to access your balance on another computer.

How can you protect yourself?
Never use an online seed generator! When generating an 81-digit seed, all you have to do is push 81 random keys on your keyboard.

Type 7: Phishing website attempts (contributed by: tosindesign)
Scammers would copy exact replica of the websites (wallets, exchanges) and try to get you to login, thereby recording you password. For example, the page Blockchain.info was copied to get the logins. You have to know that Blockchain.info also offers a wallet service where Wallet could save your bitcoins. If Google users searched for “Blockchain info” in some countries, they ran a Google ad that led to Blockchaina.info, a cheat site that has nothing to do with Blockchain.info. The site was a 1: 1 copy of Blockchain.info and was only designed to get login information from users. There are also similar attempts to MyEtherwallet.com and other sites.

How can you protect yourself?
Never click anywhere on a link to a page where you want to log in. The best way is to bookmark the pages and just go over the web pages. In addition, you should always look for the SSL encryption. There will not be a page that stores important data from you and is located at http: //. All pages should now be encrypted SSL and have a https: // domain (although the pages can also be accessed at http: // they will redirect to https: //). The SSL certificates will also show you every browser, for example by a small lock symbol.


Type 9: Used Ledger Nano (contributed by: tosindesign)
At ebay and in other marketplaces there are always offers to buy the Ledger Nano a bit cheaper. This is particularly interesting now, where the Ledger Nano S is sold out and will be available again in one month. There have been cases in the past when users bought a used ledger on ebay and the seed from the ledger was already filled out. Anyone who has not owned a ledger to date will hardly register the difference. Of course, the previous owners have also noted the seed in these cases, which then allows them to get access to the crypto currencies that the new owner stores on the Ledger Nano S.  

How can you protect yourself?
If you want to use a hardware wallet like the Ledger Nano S, buy it directly from the manufacturer and make sure that it is still original packed. The enclosed note on which you can write down the seed should never be filled.

Type 10: Airdrops that ask for personal information (contributed by: StarKay)
There are hyped up airdrops that may ask for KYC information, that may end up being used by scammers / hackers.

How to protect yourself:
Think of your personal information as an investment as well. Research who you are giving your information to and why that ICO will need it

Type 11: Identity theft via Social Media - (contributed by: darkangel11)
You have to realize what they want from you. In the end it's always your money, while in the process they may want some personal data, a phone number, whatever they can get into.

How to protect yourself: Never willingly give anything. Don't share your real social media accounts with random people, keep your email addresses to yourself and if you have to use them make sure to have burner emails. What are burners? Not necessarily emails created for every forum and project. Just emails that don't contain your personal data and that you're not using for online shopping, banking and so on.

Please add more below, or share your story.

To protect myself against these selfish and evil scammers whatever you name them, ICO scam, Scammers who sell fake coins and etc., is simply by being vigilant and keen in choosing ICO. Making a thorough research about the project and spying on them if needed. And to other scammers like hacking passwords the best thing to do is be overprotected in securing and keeping passwords and pinkeys. Store them in a usb and other offline storage. If scammers are wise be wiser.
Blekok001
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 47
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 02:12:01 PM
 #70

Research and Research in every way, make it a habit to verify before you make a decision to avoid all forms of fraud, because as clever as a cheater to cover the action, of course leaves a trail indicating that he is a fraud.
Related fraud in the world of crypto also required verification to avoid the fraud of people who are not responsible and only concerned with the benefits for himself or his group.
After you verify, you also need to find out from friends who already have experience before you make a decision.
And the very important thing to avoid fraud, never give any personal identity related to yourself. Because this is usually used as the main target of fraud perpetrators.
ceferov
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 504
Merit: 101



View Profile WWW
May 26, 2018, 04:08:23 PM
 #71

Great article while there are scammers everywhere. Most popular scammers nowadays are twitter scammers with similar names trying to get your  coins.

https://www.ETH2X.com - Multiplayer roulette gambling platform.
Dayan1
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 388
Merit: 100


All-in-One Crypto Payment Solution


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 04:26:36 PM
 #72

The only way to protect yourself with scammers is to be conscious  all the time.  When someone or some website ask for your too personal info,  back off its probably a scam,. When making a transaction ,use escrow to be safe,  escrow is a middle man just to be sure on your transaction.  Last is to not to share anything or any hint regarding your account it is really dangerous.

▀█████▄▀████▄▀███▄▀██▄▀█▄▀▄        NUPay        ▄▀▄█▀▄██▀▄███▀▄████▀▄█████▀
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ ●   A New Crypto-Payment Platform   ● ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
█      Telegram  ]      [   Medium   ]      [   ICO Page   ]      [  Facebook  ]      [ Instagram ]      █
fritzwalter195
Jr. Member
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 126
Merit: 1


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 06:30:56 PM
 #73

If you have good enough technical knowledge of how everything related to crypto works, you will be fine.
oceantiger
Jr. Member
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 308
Merit: 8


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 06:41:31 PM
 #74

The only way to protect your self from scammers is to ignore them and hold your coins in your wallet. Hold  and hold and hold till when price is good then sell off.
syesraypb
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 81
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 07:00:25 PM
 #75

Find a real person to mediate, good for both
CherRic
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 266
Merit: 12


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 07:11:28 PM
 #76

I have been in crypto world for quite sometimes and I can say that I had been protecting my accounts so securely. I just don't give my password or private key to anyone and to any sites. Do not ever deal with people offering you with great coins or rewards by giving your address and password. Do not deal with scammers.
laryillary
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 238
Merit: 11


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 07:18:13 PM
 #77

A popular trick for hackers is a telephone attack. Scammers track users on forums where electronic addresses and telephones are published, after which they call the victims and are presented as a support service. Further actions of fraudsters are aimed at stealing funds. Once the hackers have access to the wallet, they reset their password and steal the crypto currency from the account.
abanansah
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 328
Merit: 10

www.daxico.com


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 10:16:43 PM
 #78

A comprehensive report on how to protect yourself.thanks, but the quick guide is to always bookmark the correct website so that when you entering again, you won't be fooled to a phishing a site.

lifetimebitcoins
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 210
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 26, 2018, 10:29:17 PM
 #79

we should keep ourselves with phishing links sent in the mail and fake link  especially myetherwallet tokens they may hack dont link on any links
Capradina
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 756
Merit: 520



View Profile
May 27, 2018, 04:39:39 AM
 #80

very good information. to protect my data from hackers is to install anti virus and add on to detect web phishing.
And never save a Private key on your computer. print out in the paper.
it's safer in my opinion.
Pages: « 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 »  All
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!