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9 months ago

DeFi Experts Warn Over Latest Google Ads Crypto Scam

Martin Young Aug 24, 2023 21:46
DeFi and crypto industry experts have been alerting users to the latest scams that have infiltrated the world’s largest search engine.

Google appears to be taking money from fraudsters and facilitating crypto scams. These are the findings from DeFiLlama researcher “0xngmi,” who reported that scammers are buying ads for proper crypto websites on Google, but…

When users click on them, “they get sent to an ad network to track the click, but that network redirects to a scam site instead!”

DeFiLlama Domain Redirect

They said it was happening with the defillama.com domain name, which was being redirected to a scam domain.

“By using ad networks that are either malicious or compromised, they can switch the URLs,” they added.

“We’ve already reported the ad and the ad network to Google multiple times over multiple days, but Google has failed to take any action,” said the researcher.

However, when CryptoPotato tried to replicate the issue, the genuine website came up, so Google may have removed the offending ad.

‘ChainLinkGod’ said the search giant should be held accountable:

“Blows my mind how Google is not held liable for this given they profit every time an phishing link ad is clicked, they have zero incentive to fix this,”

Google Search ad phishing has also been reported by ‘Scam Sniffer,’ which revealed that a victim lost $900,000 by clicking a malicious Celer Bridge ad on Google this week.

It was another “sponsored” link that had paid Google to be there, only to redirect victims to a malicious website.

The malicious site prompted the user to approve a wallet connection by signing a transaction which resulted in that wallet being drained.

Facebook Even Worse

Social media platform Facebook is also a hotbed for scammers who pay the company to allow them to publish fraudulent pages and adverts.

The situation has got so bad in Thailand, where most of the population uses Facebook, that the government has threatened to ban the platform.

X, formerly Twitter, has also been battling scams and spam bots but hasn’t got very far. The majority of tweets from genuine industry outlets and executives quickly fill up with scam giveaways and fake airdrop posts.

These tech giants that make billions in profit from user’s data could do more to protect their product (you) from the ever-rising tide of crypto scams.

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Martin Young

Martin has been writing on cybersecurity and infotech for over two decades. He has previous trading experience and has been covering developments in the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry since 2017. Contact Martin: LinkedIn