Connect with us

Coin Market

$45 million stolen from Coinbase users in the last week — ZackXBT

Published

on

Onchain sleuth and security analyst ZackXBT claims to have identified an additional $45 million in funds stolen from Coinbase users through social engineering scams in the past seven days alone.

According to the onchain detective, the $45 million figure represents the latest financial losses in a string of social engineering scams targeting Coinbase users, which ZackXBT said is a problem unique among crypto exchanges:

“Over the past few months, I have reported on nine figures stolen from Coinbase users via similar social engineering scams. Interestingly, no other major exchange has the same problem.”

Cointelegraph reached out to Coinbase but was unable to get a response by the time of publication.

Source: ZachXBT

The claims made by ZackXBT place the total amount lost by Coinbase users to social engineering scams at $330 million annually and reflect the growing number of sophisticated attack strategies employed by threat actors to defraud crypto holders.

Related: $330M Bitcoin social engineering theft victim is elderly US citizen

FBI issues warnings on social engineering scams targeting crypto users

In July 2024, reports emerged that several Coinbase users were targeted by scammers posing as the exchange’s support staff. The scammers managed to drain $1.7 million from one user.

The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) issued a warning in August 2024, sounding the alarm on scammers posing as crypto exchanges in an attempt to steal user funds and sensitive user data.

The FBI expanded this warning in September 2024, highlighting the use of fake employment offers from scammers targeting crypto users.

According to the FBI, North Korean state-affiliated hacking groups would direct victims to download malicious software by disguising the software packages as employment tests, job applications, and information on investment opportunities.

More recently, in March 2025, crypto users reported an uptick in scam emails imitating legitimate communication from crypto exchanges, directing users to withdraw their funds to external wallets.

The growing variety and sophistication of social engineering scams prompted Coinbase chief security officer Phillip Martin to call for streamlining the scam reporting process by having a single, unified framework or repository for identifying and combating scams.

Magazine: Real AI use cases in crypto, No. 3: Smart contract audits & cybersecurity

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Coin Market

PUSD stablecoin deploys on ADI Chain, targeting $3T Islamic finance market

Published

on

By

The Shariah-compliant stablecoin backed by Gulf currencies expands to a new Layer 2 network aimed at institutional settlement in the Middle East.

Continue Reading

Coin Market

Sam Bankman-Fried pulls motion for a new trial, still asks for new judge

Published

on

By

The ex-FTX CEO said he consulted with his parents and lawyers regarding a recent filing he sent from prison, but claimed to be the ”ultimate author of the documents.”

Continue Reading

Coin Market

Trump-linked American Bitcoin energizes 11,298 new ASICs

Published

on

By

American Bitcoin (ABTC) originally purchased the mining rigs in March, weeks after reporting a $59 million loss for Q4 2025.

Continue Reading

Trending