News

Binance Scam Alert Shields Users From Fraud With New Algorithm

Key Points:

  • Binance’s new algorithm combats address poisoning scams.
  • The algorithm flagged millions of spoofed addresses on BNB and Ethereum.
  • Address poisoning scams are effective due to partial wallet code verification by traders.
Binance scam alert is able to combat address poisoning scams, identifying over 15 million spoofed addresses across BNB Smart Chain and Ethereum.

According to Cointelegraph, Binance has developed an algorithm to combat the surge in address poisoning scams. These scams involve tricking investors into sending funds to fraudulent addresses that closely resemble their own.

The deceptive practice, known as address spoofing, involves scammers sending a small amount of digital assets to a potential victim’s address, hoping the victim will accidentally copy and send funds to the scammer’s address.

Readmore: GME Calls Target Massive Gains Despite 35% Share Drop

How Binance scam alert Detects and Flags Spoofed Addresses

Binance’s algorithm identifies and flags poisoned addresses, alerting users before they transfer funds to these fraudulent addresses. The algorithm was instrumental in identifying over 13.4 million spoofed addresses on BNB Smart Chain and 1.68 million on Ethereum.

The algorithm detects spoofed addresses by identifying suspicious transfers, such as those with near zero value or unknown tokens, pairing them with potential victim addresses, and timestamping malicious transactions to find the potential point of poisoning.

These spoofed addresses are registered in the database of HashDit, a Web3 security firm and Binance’s security partner. Such a database helps protect the wider crypto industry from poisoning scams and is used by many cryptocurrency service providers to boost their defenses against a variety of scams.

Importance of Preventive Measures: A $68 Million Loss Incident

The need for this preventive algorithm became clear following a recent incident where a trader lost $68 million to an address-poisoning scam.

Address poisoning scams may seem easily avoidable, but most traders only verify the first and last digits of the wallet’s 42 alphanumeric characters, making it easier for scammers to deceive them.

Thana

I am a news editor at Coincu, where I produce daily editorial packages and manage the knowledge and review article sections. Before journalism, I earned a Bachelor's degree in Global Logistics and Supply Chain Management from Northampton University and studied news journalism at Press Association Training.

Recent Posts

Best Cryptos with 1000X Potential: Qubetics Revolutionises Blockchain as Polkadot and Cosmos Shape the Future

Discover why Qubetics, Polkadot, and Cosmos are the best cryptos with 1000X potential, offering innovation,…

20 minutes ago

Best Coins to Buy in December 2024: Qubetics Offer 630% ROI, Polkadot Delivers on Interoperability and Near Protocol’s Scalability is Talk of the Town

Explore the best coins to buy in December 2024—Qubetics with its thrilling presale, Polkadot’s interoperability,…

6 hours ago

Crypto Market Outlook 2025 Key Factors to Watch

The Crypto Market Outlook 2025 highlights key areas: stablecoin growth, tokenization, crypto ETFs, DeFi innovation,…

9 hours ago

Bitcoin Quantum Computing Threat Expected to Take Decades

The Bitcoin quantum computing threat is years away, but reserves already support post-quantum signatures via…

9 hours ago

Best New Meme Coins to Invest in Today: BTFD Coin Wows Investors with Unmissable Stage-7 Price Reversal as Book of Meme and Snek Crash

Don't miss BTFD Coin's Stage-7 presale dip! Find out why it's leading the pack of…

9 hours ago

Crypto Hedge Funds Banking Issues Persist Over Recent Years

A WSJ survey reveals crypto hedge funds banking issues over three years, with 120 out…

10 hours ago

This website uses cookies.