Crypto Updates

Your Wallet, Your Watch – Protecting Your Crypto From the Inside Out

Your Wallet, Your Watch – Protecting Your Crypto From the Inside Out

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“Not your keys, not your crypto” FTX really brought that one home.

Alameda Research misappropriated $8 billion of assets stored on FTX. It was a bitter object lesson in the value of custodying your own tokens.

The question is – are your tokens actually safer in your wallet than on an exchange?

Here’s the other side of the coin your keys and your crypto are your problem. If you sign the wrong smart contract, you could lose everything instantly with no easy path to recovery.

And while most of us regard ourselves as too sophisticated to fall for a scam, the numbers don’t lie.

The crypto scam economy has topped $1 billion in value every year since 2021, says a Federal Trade Commission report.

According to Chainalysis, the number of transfers to impersonation scammers is up by 49% so far in 2023.

Despite the hard lessons of past losses, as a community, we’re falling for more scams than ever.

Wallet drains and other scams have happened to some of the savviest traders on the planet so yes, it could happen to you.

If you’re going to custody your own tokens, which I endorse, you need to be aware of what kind of scams are out there and best practices for avoiding them.

Head on a swivel

Make no mistake crypto scammers are a professional class. Their attacks are sophisticated and ever-evolving, and they operate at scale.

Take the Magic Eden NFT exploit from earlier this year. Hackers were able to exploit a bug within one of the platform’s newly launched tools to list over a dozen fake NFTs from purportedly high-value collections.

These looked like legitimate assets on a platform users trusted to carry verified tokens. The scammers acted quickly and untraceably, making off with $15,000 worth of SOL before getting shut down.

More recently, Vitalik Buterin’s personal X account was hacked. The scammers posted a false offer for a free NFT that exposed victims to a wallet drain account.

Several high-profile collectors were fooled, and the scam netted an estimated $691,000 worth of ETH stolen assets.

Both these attacks hoodwinked experienced traders because both of them suborned trusted sources.

Magic Eden’s users received a refund from the platform, however. Such refunds are by no means guaranteed, but they are at least possible.

Those taken in by the Vitalik Buterin impersonation scam had no recourse.

Zero-trust trading

The lesson is clear when you custody your tokens, you must…

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