You Won’t Believe What These Crypto Scammers Are Up To Now! 🚨💸

In Case You’re Busy Counting Your Digital Pennies…

  • Binance just waved the red flag again about bunny-boiler scammers pretending to offer you a free VIP pass to the crypto club.
  • Last month, they also reminded us to be suspicious of weirdos calling pretending to be customer support, whispering sweet nothings about “security updates.” Spoiler: they want your wallet.

Crypto scam alert

Alert: The Only Freebies Here Are Your Tears

The world’s largest crypto exchange-basically the Walmart of digital money-warns that con artists are posing as their fancy “Business Development” people or listing agents promising guaranteed listings, aka the crypto equivalent of “free puppies.” Spoiler: neither exists.

“Listings are never guaranteed,” Binance insists, as if shouting at a room full of people who just found out their soulmate was fictional. They check projects like a suspicious Tinder date, looking for community demand, market vibes, and other boring grown-up stuff.

Binance also reminds you they don’t babysit shady agents or middlemen hustling your projects. In fact, if you dare let someone third-party get involved, consider your listing application tossed faster than a failed attempt at vegan bacon.

Did someone say “listing fee”? Nope, Binance doesn’t charge for that, proving that not all crypto dreams come with price tags. Instead, they’re more about catching promising projects to keep users happy-or at least distracted.

They do, however, ask for some commitment money, mostly earmarked for airdrops and marketing-you know, the crypto equivalent of throwing parties for your imaginary friends.

And hey, if someone calls claiming to be official, before you spill your life story, check their bona fides on Binance Verify. Because if you don’t report sus activity, well, congratulations, you just donated to scammer Central.

Flashback to Last Month’s Drama

Remember when the exchange warned about scam artists pretending to be customer support, ringing up users claiming they needed to tweak API settings? Yep, that was a scam too-as subtle as a burglar in clown shoes.

If you follow their advice, prepare to watch your funds disappear faster than your will to adult.

Richard Teng, Binance’s CEO and part-time superhero, also weighed in: they will never, ever ask for your passwords over the phone. So keep your digits guarded tighter than your Netflix password.

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2025-09-10 23:23