Tuesday, February 4

Phishing scams drained over $10.2 million in crypto from more than 9,000 victims in January, a 56% drop from December, data shows.

While phishing losses fell 56% in January to $10.25 million, new threats are spreading fast, according to latest findings reported by blockchain firm ScamSniffer.

In a Feb. 3 thread on X, the firm revealed that more than 9,200 victims lost funds last month. “Transaction simulation spoofing,” a scam tricking users into signing fake transactions, has cost victims hundreds of thousands in a single attack. For instance, one user lost 143.45 in Ethereum (ETH) (around $461,000) in just one day due to such scam attack

🚨 ScamSniffer January 2025 Phishing Report
9,220 victims lost $10.25M to crypto phishing scams last month, a 56% drop from December 2024 ($23.58M).

While losses fell, malware threats surged—though this report covers only wallet-draining phishing signatures. 🧵 [1/6] pic.twitter.com/DW00yPdBTo

— Scam Sniffer | Web3 Anti-Scam (@realScamSniffer) February 4, 2025

You might also like: Over $9m lost in November phishing scams affecting 9.2k victims, data shows

Malware is blowing up fast too. ScamSniffer says Telegram “Fake Safeguard” scams have skyrocketed over 2,000% since November 2024. Moreover, Solana users aren’t safe either as scammers are using fake Phantom wallet popups to steal seed phrases, the secret keys that unlock full control of a crypto wallet.

Meanwhile, fake accounts are also popping up — over 300 a day, twice as many as in November. As crypto.news reported earlier, scammers are even taking over big X accounts like Yahoo News UK and Lenovo India to push bogus tokens.

Blockchain sleuth ZachXBT previously warned users to revoke app permissions for their non-custodial wallets if they interacted with suspicious websites. ScamSniffer also advises victims to contact recovery services but warns against “recovery experts,” who promise 100% returns as they are just the same scammers looking to steal even more money.

Read more: Crypto phishing scammers target investors chasing Trump-backed WLFI tokens



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