Coinbase-posing scammers steal $1.7M from a user amid a string of attacks
Jesse Coghlan2 hours agoCoinbase-posing scammers steal $1.7M from a user amid a string of attacksA victim who claims to have lost $1.7 million said a scammer called them claiming to be from Coinbase and sent emails that looked like they came from the crypto exchange.1029 Total views1 Total sharesListen to article 0:00NewsOwn this piece of crypto historyCollect this article as NFTJoin us on social networksAt least three Coinbase users and one crypto user have reported being targeted by Coinbase-impersonating scammers in the past week, with one victim claiming to have been swindled out of $1.7 million.
Edge & Node co-founder Tegan Kline shared to X on July 7 an explainer from a “good friend” who had their self-custody wallet drained of $1.7 million a day prior after a scammer tricked them into sharing part of their seed phrase.
The victim said the scammer called claiming they were from Coinbase’s security team and sent the victim an email that appeared to be from Coinbase that verified the victim was “speaking to an official representative at Coinbase.”
The scammer claimed the victim’s wallet was “connecting directly with the blockchain,” causing transactions to come out of the wallet. The scammer then sent another email, which appeared to be from Coinbase and showed an outgoing transaction.Part of the victim’s explainer of the scam. Source: Tegan Kline
The scammer directed the victim to a website to enter their seed phrase to stop the transactions, which the victim knew was “not safe” but entered “a portion” of their phrase anyway, without submitting it.
Hours later, $1.7 million was drained from their wallet, they claimed.
Hiro Systems CEO Alex Miller wrote that such websites “are capturing data as you enter it” even without submitting it, and the victim’s partial reveal of their seed phrase was likely enough for “the bad guys [to] brute force the rest.”
Miller shared that he was also recently contacted by a scammer pretending to be from Coinbase using a similar scam. He believes his information may have been leaked in 2022 from CoinTracker’s email service provider database.
“Specifically, they were using the Coinbase API key connecting to CoinTracker to verify that they were me (in addition to other info),” he said. “At the very least cycle your API keys if you have been using CoinTracker,” Miller advised.
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On July 3, X user “TraderPaul04” shared what they called a “pretty sophisticated” similar social engineering attempt by a fake Coinbase rep who called them claiming there was a login attempt on their account from a different city.
TraderPaul said “an American male claiming to be a Coinbase employee” stated their full name and confirmed their email before claiming to have temporarily locked their Coinbase account, sending a fake password reset link with the aim of nabbing their account password.Source:TraderPaul04
TraderPaul wasn’t convinced and insisted on calling Coinbase customer service directly, adding the scammer “hung up” after failing to convince him not to.
On July 7, X user “beanx” posted they also had a similar scam call with a fake Coinbase rep claiming “someone attempted to login to my Coinbase.”
Cointelegraph contacted Coinbase for comment but did not receive an immediate response.
Around $1.19 billion was lost to crypto security incidents in the first half of 2024, with over $900 million stolen through phishing and seed phrase compromise attacks.
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