Elon Musk

Cryptocurrency scammers have made at least $145,000 this week by promoting fake giveaways through hacked verified Twitter accounts.

Last month, we reported an increasing trend where verified Twitter accounts are hacked to promote fake cryptocurrency giveaways. At the time, these scams pulled in a massive $580,000 in cryptocurrency over a one-week period.

The attackers target verified accounts with thousands, if not millions, of followers. They then tweet fake giveaway scams from well-known people or companies, such as Elon Musk, Tesla, Gemini Exchange, and more recently, Chamath Palihapitiya, and Social Capital.

Wiz

When tweeting the scams, it is common to see different Twitter sock puppets talking to each other as they promote each other's tweets, as shown below.

A tweet promoting a fake Elon Musk giveaway
A tweet promoting a fake Elon Musk giveaway

Embedded in the tweets are links to sites that redirect to sites pretending to be Medium posts that promote the giveaway and include further links to the actual giveaway site, as shown below.

Fake Tesla cryptocurrency giveaway site
Fake Tesla cryptocurrency giveaway site

These sites tell visitors to send cryptocurrency to the listed address, and the site will send back double the amount you sent.

People continue to fall for these scams

Unfortunately, no matter how much BleepingComputer and other reporters cover these scams, people continue to fall for them.

MalwareHunterTeam, who has been monitoring these scams, has told BleepingComputer that the scammers continue to hack verified Twitter accounts with no sign of letting up.

From the list of examples MalwareHunter shared with BleepingComputer, we have determined that the scammers have made at least $145,000 this week alone.

These earnings include 1.49094148 bitcoins, with at today's high prices is equal to $70,382.16.

Bitcoin address Amount USD amount
1L2dzTrwrA15ZbTVWeDfznMMxQ4d9shzPm 0 0
1E9GwoiRbzzEgQXk32J5ksr9FbcfGcJXuZ 0.77457775 $36,565.12
1CLAbY5VwBgnECbi5SQc97URaE9p1AUsNj 0.71636373 $33,817.04
33J8sHT2mZ7wJ6vhTssRChU3hCniZrZ6ej 0 0
1Jg4oyfZqMkDDmtLss5nyaPWghowP1BpFJ 0 0

The Ethereum giveaway scams did well for the scammers too, earning them $51,758.61.

Ethereum address Amount USD amount
0x3765960B3083F73505dac655DF99F22F8f76CBcE 0 0
0x42d2A758f71FA555AeECa1dFb2c2DAbdaA10Fb45 29.668293964802919726 $44,581.95
0x6B02FcF85552765A42aa72d310D38A423c52AA72 3.731603283835171752 $5,563.56
0xe565e041DEC29f45200A15cd3e5954AF661aA4C8 1.08347580374039716 $1,613.10

Finally, Dogecoin, the newcomer in cryptocurrency giveaways, generated $26,004.94.

Dogecoin address Amount USD amount
D6KkJA616qq64czYfcSLYgYLskQMT5hfj2 289,710.01032007  $14,619.06 
D8h7ghzJ9SiT97ZAzoFAvEU7wGdufGS6BA 199,170.61769190 $10,264.18 
DC822cesUE5drToEnKMSstBfj9Bph4wGuc 19,436.27584906 $1,121.70 

As many of the sites associated with these scams switch to different URLs and cryptocurrency addresses, the scammers likely made much more this week.

As these scams generate an incredible amount of money for the threat actors, they are not going away any time soon.

Therefore, everyone needs to understand that the vast majority of cryptocurrency giveaways are scams.

It is safer to treat any cryptocurrency giveaway you see online as a scam and understand that anything you send will not produce anything in return.

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