In the crypto space, scams are evolving fast — and lately, we’ve been seeing two dangerous trends.
On one side, there are dishonest developers and projects that later get hacked, leaving users exposed. Many people fall victim because they believe they’re dealing with the legitimate project team, when in reality they’re interacting with impostors. This often ends with users clicking on phishing links, connecting wallets to malicious sites, or even installing hidden malware.
On the other side, some projects with no real funds drag the community into long testnet periods. They create the illusion of progress and adoption, while promising big rewards. But at the very end, they demand real deposits from participants in order to “unlock” those rewards — and almost always, the team vanishes shortly after.
️ The outcome is predictable: people lose their money, trust in crypto takes another hit, and scammers keep finding new victims.
The lesson is simple:
Never trust links or DMs without verifying the source.
Don’t give unlimited approvals or connect wallets to unknown dApps.
Separate wallets: one for testing, one for savings.
And above all, confirm a project’s legitimacy before investing time or money.
Crypto offers freedom and opportunity — but only for those who stay alert.!
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