Written by: Dilip Kumar Patairya
Compiled by: Chopper, Foresight News
In the past, cybersecurity education always taught simple ways to identify scams: look out for spelling errors, awkward phrasing, and abnormal formatting. In early phishing attacks, this approach was indeed effective. Scam emails were often hastily written, awkwardly translated, and full of obvious flaws. Over time, people began to view clumsy writing as a red flag.
The emergence of artificial intelligence has completely changed this landscape.
Leveraging advanced AI tools, scammers can quickly produce smooth and fluent emails, realistic customer service chats, seemingly legitimate websites, and highly deceptive social content. Perpetrators no longer need strong writing skills to create convincing scam traps. In the crypto space, once a user clicks to authorize a transaction, assets can be lost in an instant. This shift brings entirely new security risks.
Today, the threat no longer comes from poorly crafted false information; it is the well-written, seemingly legitimate scam content that is more likely to lower people's guard.
As AI technology continues to evolve, the mindset for crypto user security must also shift. Rather than fixating on whether information itself seems suspicious, it's better to verify each operation request one by one through independent channels.
Common Scam Channels
Why Text Verification Used to Work
Early phishing scams focused on quantity over quality—scattershot spamming of messages, hoping a few would bite.
Since most scam groups were based overseas or used simple translation tools, the sent information often contained grammatical errors, stiff expressions, and messy formatting. Users gradually learned to treat these details as warning signs.
Various cybersecurity campaigns also promoted a series of basic identification techniques:
- Check for spelling errors in the text
- Avoid information with poor grammar
- Be wary of strange-sounding wording
- Pay attention to unusual formatting
These small tricks could quickly filter out crudely made scam content.
But it was never a foolproof defense, only serving as a reminder. Over time, however, many began to assume that professional and fluent writing equated to reliable content. The proliferation of AI has completely shattered this ingrained perception.
AI tools can batch-generate phishing content with excellent formatting and diction. Relying on finding text errors for fraud prevention is becoming increasingly unreliable.
How AI Upgrades Scam Tactics
Large language models can generate natural, fluent text in multiple languages, enabling scammers to create various false content:
- Fake customer service chat records
- Sophisticated phishing emails
- Imitation of legitimate exchange notifications
- Highly enticing investment pitches
- Realistic Telegram group announcements
- Customized false wallet recovery instructions
Simultaneously, AI also aids in implementing precise targeted attacks. Scammers use data breach information and user data from platforms like LinkedIn, X, Discord, and Telegram to tailor scam scripts.
The information users receive may mention these details:
- Tokens you recently purchased
- Your exchange account information
- The wallet service you are using
- Decentralized Finance (DeFi) platforms you have accessed
- Customer service issues you've inquired about publicly
Highly customized content significantly increases the credibility of scams.
Furthermore, AI-generated images and voice cloning technology make identity impersonation simpler. Forging executive videos, simulating customer service voices, and replicating brand visual elements can now be easily achieved.
Unique Risks Faced by Crypto Users
The security logic of crypto assets is fundamentally different from traditional banking. In traditional finance, if you encounter a mistaken transfer or scam, you can usually contact the bank, payment institution, or risk control team to recover the funds. But once a crypto transaction is confirmed on the blockchain, it is essentially irreversible.
Self-custody wallets also amplify the attack surface. Scammers may not need to steal passwords or private keys; often, simply tricking users into authorizing malicious transactions or opening high-risk wallet permissions is enough to succeed.
This means that even if a user has never leaked their seed phrase, well-crafted scam interfaces still pose a huge risk.
Common scam forms in the crypto space include:
- Fake airdrop claim websites
- Counterfeit NFT minting events
- Imitated exchange login pages
- Inducing connections to malicious wallets
- Pop-ups inducing authorization of malicious tokens
- False staking/mining interfaces
- Impersonating official customer service for fraud
- Registering high-imitation accounts on platforms like Telegram, Discord
With the help of AI, such scams can be produced in bulk while maintaining the realism of content and interfaces.
Core Verification Methods Users Should Master
Faced with increasingly realistic scams, crypto users can no longer rely on superficial judgment; verification must become the first principle.
1) Carefully Verify the Domain Name
Website appearance can be imitated, but the URL is hard to make identical. Fraudulent domains often use these tricks: adding extra characters, random hyphens, using look-alike symbols, tampering with subdomains, choosing obscure domain suffixes.
Even if the page looks exactly like a legitimate platform, do not trust it based solely on logos and visuals. Recommended practices:
- Manually type URLs for commonly used platforms
- Use saved bookmarks for wallets and exchanges whenever possible
- Always verify the domain before connecting a wallet
- Do not click links in unfamiliar messages or promotional content
A beautiful page does not mean a legitimate website.
2) Prioritize Links from Official Channels
False announcements, influencer impersonation accounts, and scam accounts are common vectors for spreading scams. Fraudulent links are mainly disseminated through: Telegram groups, Discord channels, X comment sections, paid search ads, fake customer service messages.
Confirm that links come from the project's official website or officially announced channels. Additionally, cross-reference updates from multiple official accounts to further reduce risk.
Be highly vigilant when receiving unsolicited private messages claiming urgent issues with your account.
Malicious link found in a Bing search for a Trezor wallet balance check
3) Clarify Wallet Permissions Before Authorization
Many users have the misconception that any request popping up from their wallet is safe. Especially when facing seemingly professional websites, people often casually click confirm, ignoring permission details.
Wallet interactions involve various operation types: connecting a wallet, signing messages, authorizing token transfers, opening general permissions, triggering smart contract interactions, etc.
Among these, unlimited approval poses the highest risk, allowing malicious contracts to freely transfer your assets later. Before authorizing, always verify that the involved token type, permitted transfer amount, requesting contract address, and operation details match your expectations.
Even if a website looks flawless, it could trigger high-risk wallet operations.
4) Verify All Details Before Signing a Transaction
AI scams often exploit urgency to rush users into quick confirmation. Before signing any transaction, be sure to check every item: recipient address, token amount, selected blockchain, contract interaction information, fee rules, authorization scope.
If a page is labeled "Claim Reward" but asks for unlimited token permissions, or labeled "Wallet Verification" but initiates an asset transfer, stop immediately and investigate the risk.
Once transaction details do not match expectations, do not proceed.
Many wallet scams start with users publicly complaining about account issues on social platforms. Scammers monitor such posts and then impersonate customer service via private messages to commit fraud.
5) Verify Contract Addresses, Do Not Blindly Trust Token Names
Scammers will replicate token names and icons to create highly convincing counterfeit tokens. A token that appears to be named "USDT" or "ETH Yield" may have a completely unrelated issuer.
Verification method: Confirm the token's corresponding contract address through the project's official website, legitimate block explorers, officially published materials, and mainstream exchange information. As AI scams become more realistic, judging authenticity based solely on token names and icons carries increasing risk.
6) Be Wary of Unsolicited Customer Service Private Messages
Impersonating official customer service remains a prevalent scam tactic in the crypto space. Scammers monitor user help requests on social platforms, then privately message them pretending to be staff, tricking users into "verifying" wallets, asking for seed phrases, sending malicious links, recommending remote control tools, or guiding users to complete dangerous authorizations.
Legitimate official customer service almost never initiates private messages; platforms will never ask for private keys or seed phrases. If you encounter issues, proactively contact customer service through official channels; do not respond to unsolicited private messages.
7) Urgent Pressure is Often a Sign of a Scam
Even if a scam is crafted with utmost professionalism, scammers still use psychological pressure to create urgency. Common scripts include: "Your wallet has been compromised," "Tokens are about to expire, claim quickly," "Account will be suspended soon," "KYC verification failed," "Need to complete a security update immediately."
Such scripts can cloud judgment. The more they pressure you to act immediately, the more you should slow down and verify carefully.
Simple crypto security rule: Whenever asked to operate your wallet immediately, pause and calmly verify first.
A Polished Exterior No Longer Equals Safety
Today's scam websites can accurately replicate brand logos, color schemes, page layouts, and writing styles. AI can also help create high-imitation FAQ pages, fake customer service replies, counterfeit news articles, complete new user onboarding processes, and promotional copy.
Judging platform trustworthiness based on visual appeal alone is no longer possible. Attackers only need to catch a user's momentary lapse to carry out irreversible asset theft.
The core of security protection remains verification: verifying domain names, checking contracts, reviewing wallet requests, confirming customer service identity, clarifying transaction purposes. Good design does not equal trustworthiness.
Crypto Security Has Evolved into a Battle of Verification
AI hasn't created entirely new scam models; it has simply dramatically upgraded the presentation and disguise level of traditional scam techniques. In the past, people were accustomed to judging risk based on surface characteristics, neglecting the act of verification itself. This mindset can lead to massive losses in the crypto industry.
Behind a perfectly phrased text could lie a malicious link; behind a seemingly professional customer service reply could be a guide to authorizing asset transfers; a website convincing enough to pass as real could open high-risk permissions.
The core lesson is simple: smooth copy, exquisite interfaces, and familiar brand imagery cannot serve as security credentials. Faced with every link, every wallet pop-up, every customer service message—verify first, then act.







