🚨 They don’t "hack" you, you give them the key🚨
Many users believe that crypto thefts occur due to complex failures in the blockchain, but the reality is simpler: social engineering. In 2026, scammers don’t break codes, they break your attention.
🛡️ The 3 most common scams today:
Address Poisoning: Scammers send transactions of 0 to your wallet from an address that is almost identical to yours. If you copy the address from your history for your next transfer, you could be sending your funds to them.
Solution: Never copy addresses from history. Use your verified address book or QR codes.
False approvals of Smart Contracts: You enter a site for a "Airdrop" or free "Mint", connect your wallet and sign a transaction. What you didn't read is that you gave permission (Approve) to empty all your USDT.
Solution: Always check what you are signing. Use tools like Revoke.cash periodically to clean up old permissions.
Fake Technical Support: No one from Binance (or any wallet) will contact you via DM on Telegram or WhatsApp to "help you" with a problem you didn't report.
Solution: Immediate blocking. Official support only occurs through the channels within the Binance App.
💡 Golden Rules for Your Safety:
MFA is mandatory: Do not use SMS. Use Binance Authenticator or Google Authenticator.
Anti-Phishing Code: Set it up on your Binance account. If the email you receive does not have your secret code, it is fake.
Verify the URL: Mirror sites look identical. Save the official site in your bookmarks.
Remember: In crypto, responsibility is the price of financial freedom. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is a scam.
#CryptoSecurity #AntiScamEducation #BinanceSquare #SafetyFirst #dyor


