# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Scam

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Scam", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

During the World Cup, USDT becomes the preferred chip for illegal gambling? Beware of three typical scams

During the 2026 FIFA World Cup, USDT has become the preferred payment method for illegal online gambling due to its price stability, anonymity, and fast cross-border transfers. This article analyzes how USDT facilitates this activity and outlines three major scams targeting users. **Why USDT is the "Chip of Choice"**: It solves bettors' anxiety over crypto volatility, enables instant cross-border transfers without traditional banking, and shows significant abnormal transaction spikes during major events. **The Fund Flow**: Gambling platforms use a complex laundering chain involving multi-layer address hopping, cross-chain transfers (e.g., Polygon to Tron), mixers like Tornado Cash, and final cash-out via exchanges. **Three Typical Scams**: 1. **"USDT Betting Evades Regulation"**: Fake platforms promising anonymous, high-odds betting but manipulating outcomes. 2. **Fake Sportsbooks**: High-quality replica sites that allow small initial withdrawals to build trust before freezing accounts with larger funds. 3. **"Insider Tips / Guaranteed Wins"**: Schemes selling fabricated "AI predictions" or "fixed match" models to exploit information anxiety. **Identifying Suspicious Addresses**: Key chain-based indicators include a "fast-in, fast-out" transaction pattern, clustered addresses with consistent behavior, uniform Gas fee patterns, and frequent cross-chain jumps. **User Protection Advice**: * Avoid any project promoting "USDT betting," "Web3 predictions," or "anonymous high returns." * Be skeptical of promises like "guaranteed wins" or "insider models." * Do not trust platforms just because they allow small withdrawals—this is a common trust-building tactic. * If scammed, preserve all evidence: transaction hashes, wallet addresses, chat logs, and platform URLs. **Conclusion**: USDT provides unprecedented liquidity for illicit activities. The most effective protection for users is complete non-participation in any form of online crypto gambling.

marsbit2 дня назад 10:48

During the World Cup, USDT becomes the preferred chip for illegal gambling? Beware of three typical scams

marsbit2 дня назад 10:48

The Hunter Becomes the Hunted: The Most Profitable MEV Bot Gets Hacked

A well-known and highly profitable Ethereum MEV Bot, Jaredfromsubway.eth, suffered a sophisticated on-chain attack this Saturday, losing over $7.5 million. Analysis by Blockaid and others reveals this was not a conventional phishing or smart contract exploit, but a targeted "counter-MEV honeypot attack." The attacker meticulously laid a trap over several weeks, deploying 66 fake token contracts and liquidity pools disguised as major assets like WETH and USDC. These pools created the illusion of arbitrage opportunities. The MEV Bot's automated system detected these signals, executed trades, and in the process, granted approval permissions to attacker-controlled contracts. These approvals were not revoked, creating a persistent vulnerability. The attacker then exploited this in a single transaction, draining the bot's ETH, USDC, and USDT holdings. Jaredfromsubway.eth is notorious as one of Ethereum's most active and profitable MEV Bots, primarily known for executing "sandwich attacks" to profit from transaction slippage. Estimates suggest it has earned tens of millions in MEV revenue. The incident highlights escalating crypto security threats, demonstrating that even top-tier automated "predators" are vulnerable to novel, logic-based attacks designed to exploit their own operational rules. Following the hack, an unverified X account impersonating Jaredfromsubway.eth emerged, falsely offering a bounty for the return of funds, prompting developer warnings for users to stay vigilant.

marsbit06/21 09:22

The Hunter Becomes the Hunted: The Most Profitable MEV Bot Gets Hacked

marsbit06/21 09:22

Female Crypto Mogul Survived Mining Crackdown and Market Plunge, but Paid a $60 Million Tuition to a U.S.-Style 'Pig-Butchering' Scam

An 80s-born Chinese entrepreneur, Fiona Lyu (also known as Lv Yongshuang), CEO of the mining firm Chengdu Valarhash Technology, was defrauded of over $9.4 million (approx. RMB 60 million) in the US, according to a Caixin report. Lyu's company once operated the 1THash and Bytepool mining pools, which collectively controlled about 9% of the global Bitcoin hash rate at their peak in early 2020. The scam began in 2021 after China's crackdown on crypto mining forced Lyu to seek overseas relocation for her operations. She was introduced to Zubair Al Zubair, who posed as an "UAE royal family member" with connections to Middle Eastern capital and US local government resources. He and his brother, who impersonated a hedge fund manager, orchestrated a fake contract signing for a mining facility in Ohio, witnessed by local officials. Lyu transferred millions in contract payments. The brothers, both US citizens with fabricated backgrounds, later fraudulently sold 1,067 of her miners for $6.17 million. The scheme involved bribing a mayor's chief of staff for legitimacy. In May 2026, US courts sentenced Zubair to 24 years in prison, his brother to 23 years, and the official to 8 years. Simultaneously, Lyu faced a separate legal battle in China. A subsidiary of listed company ST Zhongchang sued her firm, seeking refunds for a 2021 contract involving Bitcoin mining equipment. Chinese courts ruled the mining contract invalid and ordered a refund of nearly RMB 19.3 million. This dual blow marked a stark downturn for the once-prominent figure in the crypto mining industry.

Foresight News06/11 09:39

Female Crypto Mogul Survived Mining Crackdown and Market Plunge, but Paid a $60 Million Tuition to a U.S.-Style 'Pig-Butchering' Scam

Foresight News06/11 09:39

The 'Middle Eastern Prince' Swindles a Wealthy Woman: Renting Planes and Rolls-Royces, Scamming 120 Million Over Three Years

Two brothers who posed as "Middle Eastern princes" have been sentenced in the United States to 24 and 23 years in prison, respectively, and ordered to pay over $21.2 million in restitution and back taxes. Over three years, they fraudulently obtained approximately $21 million, primarily by promoting fictitious investment projects, including a non-existent cryptocurrency mining operation in a former General Electric industrial park in East Cleveland. The brothers, aged 42 and 33, created elaborate personas: one claimed to be a wealthy royal family heir and the city's "International Economic Advisor," while the other posed as a hedge fund manager with expertise from watching the TV show *Billions*. They bolstered their image by renting luxury cars and private jets and cultivating a relationship with a local mayor's chief of staff, who provided official-looking documents and government event access. A significant portion of the victims' funds, about $18 million, came from a single Chinese investor, a woman from Sichuan with experience in Bitcoin mining. The brothers also defrauded several women, including one former girlfriend. Their scheme unraveled when the primary investor discovered her $6 million worth of mining equipment had been sold off. The case highlights a trend of impostors using fabricated "Middle Eastern royal" identities to target wealthy individuals. Similar incidents include a "Dubai prince" who recently promoted a $500 million family office in Hong Kong and a Colombian man who impersonated a Saudi prince for decades in the US before being caught and sentenced in 2019.

marsbit06/11 07:43

The 'Middle Eastern Prince' Swindles a Wealthy Woman: Renting Planes and Rolls-Royces, Scamming 120 Million Over Three Years

marsbit06/11 07:43

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