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Fake Litecoin Foundation Scam Defrauds 309 LTC from Users

2 mins
Updated by Kyle Baird
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A fake Litecoin Foundation operating on YouTube and Facebook is apparently scamming people out of their LTC. The scheme was recently exposed on Twitter.
It’s another day in the cryptocurrency world and yet another scam is making the rounds. Users have reportedly been scammed by a dubious Litecoin Foundation giveaway which has been promoted both on YouTube and Facebook. Litecoin LTC Hash Rate

Fake Litecoin Foundation Scams Users

User David Schwartz (@DaddyCool1991) took to Twitter recently to expose the scam which has been widely shared. The scam was first reported by Naomi Brockwell (@naomibrockwell). The video for the fake Litecoin Foundation features a seven-hour-long stream of the actual Litecoin Summit from 2019. It promotes a giveaway throughout the video thus giving users the impression that it is current and legitimate. The scam’s description promises a giveaway of 100,000 LTC to “celebrate the global power of Coinbase and LTC.” Users are requested to send between 10 and 1000 LTC to the contribution address to ‘immediately’ receive a reward. The video has 154 likes on YouTube at the time of publication. According to the scammer’s address, in total around 309 LTC was defrauded from users. That’s about the equivalent of $12,505 — a non-negligible amount. Altcoins

Never Trust Cryptocurrency ‘Giveaways’

The scam is something that the cryptocurrency industry is more than familiar with and relies on a common strategy — requesting that crypto-assets be sent to an address with the promise of sending back more in a giveaway. It’s a scheme that has been around since the early beginnings of the cryptocurrency industry. However, users are clearly still falling for it. The fact that this particular scam tried to sell itself as being the real Litecoin Foundation probably made it more effective. It seems that there is no opportunity that scammers won’t try to exploit in the blockchain space. As BeInCrypto reported recently, even Nobel laureate and economist Paul Krugman was targetted recently. In total, scams were expected to generate some $4.3B in stolen funds by year’s end. That’s around $1B stolen from cryptocurrency users, exchanges, and entities every quarter. Although the tally has yet to be properly counted for 2019, this appears to be accurate. It’s clear that scamming is still an epidemic and has not abated at all since the bull market of 2017. That alone should cause some worry. The cryptocurrency industry as a whole has to be more proactive in fighting off these scammers or else this will continue to plague the space for years to come.
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