# 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.

After the Collapse of the Believe Flywheel Myth, the 26-Year-Old Prodigy Founder Stands as Defendant in Federal Court

In March 2026, 26-year-old Australian entrepreneur Ben Pasternak and his entities B24, Inc. and Believe Foundation were sued in a New York federal court. Investors accused Pasternak of deceptive practices and false advertising through three consecutive token offerings and a forced token migration, causing hundreds of millions in losses. The case centers on Believe (formerly Clout.me), a Solana-based social token launch platform Pasternak founded. Users could create tokens via tweets, with the platform token LAUNCHCOIN reaching a peak market cap of $370 million in May 2025. Pasternak initially claimed he had "zero ownership" of his self-named token, PASTERNAK, which crashed over 95% within a week. In October 2025, Believe forced a migration from LAUNCHCOIN to a new token, BELIEVE, increasing total supply by 33.3%. New tokens were allocated to team members, investors, and the foundation, diluting existing holders. Pasternak falsely claimed no tokens were allocated to insiders for a year, while the foundation received 40 million tokens with no lock-up. The platform generated an estimated $54 million in fees from $6 billion in trading volume. Pasternak earned creator fees throughout. After the migration, significant selling occurred from top wallets. BELIEVE’s value plummeted from its peak to around $1.2 million. Pasternak, a former teen prodigy who dropped out of school at 15, had previously founded apps like Monkey and the food-tech startup NUGGS. His personal life also drew attention, including a public breakup in early 2026. Once hailed as "the next Zuckerberg," he now faces legal and reputational collapse.

marsbit04/16 09:44

After the Collapse of the Believe Flywheel Myth, the 26-Year-Old Prodigy Founder Stands as Defendant in Federal Court

marsbit04/16 09:44

A Brief History of Web3 Airdrops: A Review of Twelve Iconic 'Rug Pull' Projects

**Summary: A History of Web3 Airdrop "Rug Pulls" – 12 Iconic Cases** The era of Web3 airdrops has shifted from a golden age of mutual benefit between early users and projects to a landscape dominated by systematic exploitation. This article reviews 12 infamous "anti-airdrop" projects that eroded user trust: 1. **Hop Protocol (HOP):** Pioneered a "community witch-hunt" model, encouraging users to report Sybil addresses to claim their rewards, fostering a toxic environment of mutual harm. 2. **Blast:** Introduced the exploitative "points system," locking user funds for meager returns that often underperformed risk-free yields, turning airdrop hunting into a rigged casino. 3. **LayerZero (ZRO):** After 18 months of user-funded gas fees, it implemented a harsh "guilty until proven innocent" Sybil filter, forcing users to "self-confess" or face zero rewards, destroying multi-chain interaction narratives. 4. **zkSync (ZK):** Prioritized "funds held at a specific time" over long-term activity, betraying early contributors who spent significant gas and rewarding insiders, crushing L2 airdrop expectations. 5. **Infinex:** Lured users with NFT and point systems, only to announce a high FDV, a mandatory 1-year lockup, and chaotic rules at its public sale, betraying its community. 6. **Linea:** Perfected user exploitation with endless, grueling Galxe Odyssey tasks and KYC requirements, reducing airdrop hunting to a low-wage, full-time job. 7. **Grass:** Exploited users' physical resources (bandwidth/IP) for DePIN data, rewarding them with tokens worth less than the electricity and proxy costs incurred. 8. **Monad:** Allocated a mere ~3.3% of its airdrop to the community after extensive testnet participation, favoring KOLs and insiders and dampening enthusiasm for new L1s. 9. **Babylon:** Forced Ethereum-style staking onto Bitcoin, causing users massive losses from failed transactions due to high fees and network congestion, damaging trust in L2s. 10. **Backpack:** Encouraged massive trading volume for points, then applied strict KYC and Sybil rules last minute, resulting in massive losses for users and cementing a negative stereotype for projects with Chinese founders. 11. **EdgeX:** Perpetual DEX users lost significant fees for minimal rewards, while "insider" addresses received enormous allocations, exposing blatant corruption and killing the Perp DEX airdrop narrative. 12. **Genius:** The final straw: users were forced to choose between immediately claiming only 30% of their airdrop, locking tokens for a year for 100%, or a 100% burn for a gas fee refund, shattering trust in "elite-backed" narratives. **Conclusion** marks the painful end of the airdrop era. This collective "rug pull" was a co-created disaster of speculation and greed. The collapse, while brutal, forces a return to fundamentals: sustainable products with real product-market fit are paramount. This is not just the end of airdrops but a potential rebirth for Web3, weeding out exploitative projects and rewarding those that build genuine community value.

marsbit04/14 03:14

A Brief History of Web3 Airdrops: A Review of Twelve Iconic 'Rug Pull' Projects

marsbit04/14 03:14

Brother Sun "Rights Protection" Stands Up Against the Trump Family, WLFI Is the Real Scythe in the Crypto Circle

The article details the controversy surrounding World Liberty Financial (WLFI), a cryptocurrency project linked to the Trump family. It reports that WLFI allegedly used the DeFi lending protocol Dolomite, whose co-founder is also a WLFI advisor, as a disguised channel to sell tokens by collateralizing around 5 billion WLFI tokens to borrow approximately $75 million in stablecoins. Despite WLFI's claims that the loans were for ecosystem development and posed no liquidation risk, critics argue it was a way for insiders to cash out, shifting risk to retail investors. The piece highlights WLFI's significant price decline—over 66% since its September 2025 launch—and suggests the Trump family and insiders are the main source of selling pressure, as they control nearly 74% of the token supply. It also revisits WLFI’s prior move to blacklist 272 addresses, including those of investor Justin Sun, under the pretext of preventing large-scale sell-offs, which now appears to be an effort to reduce competition for their own sales. Sun publicly accused WLFI of exploiting users, freezing assets, and treating the crypto community as a "personal ATM." WLFI countered by threatening legal action. The author notes that while Sun’s criticism may gain sympathy, a legal battle in the U.S. against the well-connected Trump family would be risky for him. Finally, the article concludes that WLFI exemplifies how powerful elites can exploit crypto’s regulatory gray areas for profit, and urges the community to reject such projects driven more by political privilege than genuine decentralized finance ideals.

Odaily星球日报04/13 12:17

Brother Sun "Rights Protection" Stands Up Against the Trump Family, WLFI Is the Real Scythe in the Crypto Circle

Odaily星球日报04/13 12:17

CertiK Releases Cryptocurrency ATM Fraud Report: Losses Reach $330 Million, AI Scams and Cross-Border Money Laundering Emerge as Major Threats

CertiK's "Skynet Cryptocurrency ATM Fraud Report" reveals that losses from such scams reached $330 million in 2025, a 33% year-on-year increase, making it one of the fastest-growing financial crimes in the U.S. The report highlights that these scams have evolved into a highly organized transnational criminal industry, leveraging social engineering and AI technologies. Cryptocurrency ATMs, with 78% located in the U.S., serve as a rapid channel for fraudsters to transfer funds. Victims, often elderly individuals who account for 86% of the losses, are manipulated via phone calls or messages to deposit cash into these machines. The funds are quickly converted into cryptocurrency and transferred to wallets controlled by criminals, making recovery nearly impossible once the transaction is on the blockchain. AI-driven scams, including voice cloning and deepfake videos, have proven 4.5 times more profitable than traditional methods. Criminal networks use automated scripts and employ "smurfing" tactics to bypass transaction limits. The illicit funds are rapidly laundered through mixing services, cross-chain bridges, and decentralized exchanges, often within minutes. The report emphasizes that the only effective intervention point is at the transaction entry level, before funds are on-chain. It calls for enhanced KYC measures, industry-wide intelligence sharing, real-time risk screening, and stronger cross-border law enforcement cooperation to combat this escalating threat.

marsbit04/02 07:36

CertiK Releases Cryptocurrency ATM Fraud Report: Losses Reach $330 Million, AI Scams and Cross-Border Money Laundering Emerge as Major Threats

marsbit04/02 07:36

Cyber Chumaxian: Fake Taoists, AI Fortune-Telling, and the Forgotten Mysticism of Northeast China

"Cyber Shamans: Fake Taoists, AI Fortune-Telling, and the Untold Story of Northeast China’s Occultism" For millennia, the Chinese have developed complex metaphysical systems—from oracle bone divination to the I Ching and Four Pillars of Destiny—to seek security in an uncertain world. Despite modern technology’s attempt to replace superstition with rationality, AI has ironically become occultism’s latest tool. Recent crackdowns exposed fake Taoists using AI to answer existential queries, while apps like CeCe attract millions with free AI fortune-telling, later charging for live “spiritual” consultations. At the heart of this fusion is Northeast China, where Shamanic and “Chumaxian” traditions (based on animal spirits possessing humans) have evolved into a robust industry. Historically rooted in hardship—from the migration waves of “Chuang Guandong” to post-industrial unemployment—Northeastern metaphysics thrives on uncertainty. Today, it offers what many call “therapy tailored for the Chinese soul”: externalizing blame through cosmic narratives (e.g., bad luck years or evil spirits), unlike Western psychology’s inward focus. AI accelerates this shift. With algorithms now matching expert diviners in accuracy, low-end fortune tellers are being replaced. Meanwhile, prompt-savvy “metaphysical engineers” use AI to generate readings, focusing only on emotional delivery. Live-streamed “cyber shamans” combine folksy warmth with AI-generated scripts, offering cheap comfort in anxious times. This trend has even gone global. Startups like FateTell sell AI-translated Chinese astrology reports to overseas users, repackaging “feudal superstition” as Eastern philosophy for Silicon Valley elites. Yet behind the rise of AI mysticism lies a deeper human yearning—for certainty in an unstable world. As regulations tighten on AI divination, the core demand remains: whether through shamans or algorithms, people still seek comfort when facing the unknown.

marsbit03/30 02:08

Cyber Chumaxian: Fake Taoists, AI Fortune-Telling, and the Forgotten Mysticism of Northeast China

marsbit03/30 02:08

UK targets crypto network behind Southeast Asia scam centres in first-of-its-kind sanctions move

The UK government has imposed first-of-its-kind sanctions on the cryptocurrency platform Xinbi for its role in enabling large-scale scam operations in Southeast Asia. Announced on March 26, the measures target a network providing crypto-based services to fraud centres, including the sale of stolen data and tools to target individuals. The action also focuses on individuals linked to a major scam compound in Cambodia, known as “#8 Park,” which can house up to 20,000 workers—many of whom are reportedly trafficked and forced to conduct scams. Authorities stated that Xinbi played a central role in facilitating payments and laundering proceeds from these illicit activities, which include romance frauds targeting global victims. The platform has also been associated with moving crypto assets connected to North Korea. This move is part of a broader crackdown that has already led to over £1 billion in asset freezes and seizures, following coordinated efforts with international partners like the US. The sanctions aim to isolate such platforms from the legitimate crypto ecosystem, disrupt financial channels, and freeze UK-based assets of sanctioned individuals. This action reflects a strategic shift toward targeting the financial infrastructure behind illicit operations, not just the perpetrators, signaling increased regulatory focus on crypto-enabled crime.

ambcrypto03/26 23:01

UK targets crypto network behind Southeast Asia scam centres in first-of-its-kind sanctions move

ambcrypto03/26 23:01

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