City
Epaper

Scammers use Google, X ads to steal $59 mn in crypto from 63K victims: Report

By IANS | Updated: December 24, 2023 18:55 IST

San Francisco, Dec 24 Scammers have used a wallet draining service called "MS Drainer" to steal nearly $58.98 ...

Open in App

San Francisco, Dec 24 Scammers have used a wallet draining service called "MS Drainer" to steal nearly $58.98 million in crypto from about 63,210 victims over the past nine months, as per a new report.

According to blockchain security platform Scam Sniffer, the scammers used Google or X (formerly Twitter) ads to target victims with fake versions of popular crypto sites including Zapper, Lido, Stargate, DefiLlama, Orbiter Finance, and Radiant.

Wallet drainers are blockchain technologies that enable scammers to transfer cryptocurrency from a victim to the attacker without the victim's knowledge, typically by manipulating the token approval process.

The researchers first became aware of MS Drainer in March. At the time, the SlowMist security platform team helped with the investigation.

In June, on-chain sleuth ZachXBT provided further evidence, uncovering a phishing scam called “Ordinal Bubbles” that was linked to the drainer, the report mentioned.

"After several friends around us clicked on search ads by mistake and were phished, we analysed the situation of malicious Google search ads and found that a fake Radiant ad was using them," the researchers said.

They discovered nine different phishing ads on Google, 60 per cent of which used the malicious programme.

The researchers discovered 10,072 bogus sites that used MS Drainer. The activity of the drainer peaked in November and has subsequently dropped to almost zero.

Further investigation found that the MS Drainer developer used an odd marketing strategy. Unlike most wallet drainers, which take a percentage of scammers' income, this one was advertised on forums for a flat price of $1,499.99. If a fraudster desired further features, the developer sold them additional "modules" for $699.99, $999.99, or comparable sums.

"As users, we should be extra cautious when seeing advertisements, always be skeptical before signing anything, and always verify whether we might be in the middle of a phishing attempt," the researchers suggested.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalHRW marks 30th anniversary of Panchen Lama's disappearance, urges global action

InternationalThree earthquakes jolt Myanmar on Thursday

NationalRJD legislator Mukesh Raushan injured in road accident; condition stable

Other SportsNever close friends with Arshad Nadeem, things won't be the same now: Neeraj Chopra

NationalDelhi Tourism Minister Kapil Mishra plans ‘branding campaign’

International Realted Stories

InternationalPregnant Israeli woman fights for her life after Samaria ambush shooting attack

InternationalIndia thanks Honduras for expressing 'strong solidarity' over Pahalgam attack

InternationalIndia's decision to engage with Pakistan was not result of US mediation: KP Fabian

InternationalIsraeli forces arrest terrorists in Samaria, seize weapons

InternationalIndus Treaty on hold until Pakistan 'credibly and irrevocably' abjures support for cross-border terrorism