Address Poisoning Scams Drain Millions as Crypto Attacks Surge

ETH3,68%

Crypto users lost tens of millions of dollars in January to address poisoning and signature phishing scams, as attackers exploited lower transaction costs and user inattention to steal funds at scale.

Scam Sniffer Warns of Spike in Address Poisoning Losses

Crypto wallet scams intensified in January, with address poisoning and signature phishing attacks driving significant losses, according to data from blockchain security firm Scam Sniffer.

In one of the most striking cases, a single victim lost $12.2 million after mistakenly copying a malicious address from their transaction history. The incident followed a similar address poisoning attack in December that resulted in roughly $50 million in losses.

Scam Sniffer reported that address poisoning remains one of the most reliable methods for draining large sums from crypto wallets. Attackers create addresses that match the first and last characters of a trusted wallet, while subtly altering the middle portion, making them difficult to spot at a glance.

Alongside address poisoning, signature phishing attacks also surged in January. Scam Sniffer estimates that $6.27 million was stolen from 4,741 victims through malicious signature requests, marking a 207% increase compared to December. Notably, just two wallets were responsible for 65% of all signature phishing-related losses during the month.

Unlike address poisoning, signature phishing relies on tricking users into signing harmful blockchain transactions, such as granting unlimited token approvals or authorizing fund transfers without realizing the consequences.

Analysts believe the recent rise in attack volume may be partly linked to Ethereum’s Fusaka upgrade, rolled out in December. By reducing transaction costs, the upgrade made it cheaper for attackers to send large numbers of dust transactions, lowering the barrier to running address poisoning campaigns at scale.

Read more: SEC Sounds Alarm as Crypto Scammers Flood Group Chats With AI-Powered Cons

Security firms continue to urge users to double-check wallet addresses, avoid copying addresses from transaction histories, and carefully review signature requests before approving them, as these attack methods show no signs of slowing down.

FAQ 🚨

  • What is address poisoning in crypto?

Scammers send look-alike wallet addresses to trick users into copying the wrong one.

  • How much was lost to these scams in January?

Victims lost tens of millions, including a single $12.2 million address poisoning case.

  • Why did signature phishing spike sharply?

Attackers exploited user inattention, stealing $6.27 million via malicious signatures.

  • What’s driving the rise in these attacks now?

Lower transaction fees made large-scale scam campaigns cheaper and easier to run.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

US Treasury Sanctions North Korean IT Fraud Network Facilitators, Crypto Industry Becomes Key Target

The U.S. Department of the Treasury has imposed sanctions on six individuals and two entities for allegedly assisting North Korean IT workers in conducting fraud and providing financial support to North Korean weapons programs. The sanctioned entities include a North Korean company and a Vietnamese company, involving approximately $2.5 million in transfers. Investigations reveal that such fraud schemes target multiple industries and pose serious security threats to the cryptocurrency sector.

GateNews31m ago

Ark Invest Discovers Over $480 Billion in Bitcoin Vulnerable to Quantum Computing Attacks

A new report from ARK Invest warns that approximately 6.9 million Bitcoin — equivalent to an estimated value of 483 billion USD at an average price of 70,000 USD — are at risk of being attacked by quantum computers in the future. Risk from elliptic curve cryptography This threat centers on the elliptic curve cryptographic system

TapChiBitcoin38m ago

A user experienced 89 address poisoning attacks within 30 minutes after completing two transfers

Etherscan recently issued a security warning alerting users to beware of address poisoning attacks. Attackers create fake addresses similar to addresses users have previously interacted with to trick users into sending funds to the wrong destination. It is recommended that users confirm the complete address when transferring funds and use address highlighting features to avoid risks.

GateNews2h ago

Ledger Donjon Finds MediaTek Flaw Exposing Android Wallet Seeds

_Ledger Donjon exposed a MediaTek vulnerability that extracts Android wallet seed phrases in under 45 seconds, affecting millions of devices. CVE-2025-20435._ Ledger Donjon has uncovered a serious MediaTek vulnerability. It lets attackers pull wallet seed phrases from Android phones in seconds.

LiveBTCNews9h ago

Authorities Freeze $3.5M in Crypto as Europol, DOJ Disrupt ‘SocksEscort’ Proxy Network

In brief Europol and partners announced the disruption of the “SocksEscort” malicious proxy service and the freezing of $3.5 million in cryptocurrency linked to the operation. The network allegedly compromised more than 369,000 routers and IoT devices and offered customers more than 35,000 p

Decrypt9h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments