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Topic: [2018-05-21] Crypto Scams, Fake ICOs Cost Australians Over AU$2 Million in 2017 (Read 120 times)

legendary
Activity: 3374
Merit: 2198
I stand with Ukraine.
Okay, let's do some simple math here. According to the ACCC report AUD $340 million were lost to scammers in 2017. And cryptocurrency-related frauds has entailed AUD $2.1 million in losses.

(2.1 : 340.0) x 100% = 0.6%

Giving the article that title is called data manipulation, if I'm not mistaken. Because AUD $2.1 million looks like a big amount, and people usually tend to remember titles, so it will stick in their minds that Australians lost a big amount to crypto scams last year, while the amount is not so big compared to AUD $340 million.

For example, Business Insider used less manipulative title for the same news: Australians lost a record $340 million last year to scammers.
Source: https://www.businessinsider.com.au/scams-scamwatch-accc-report-2018-5
hero member
Activity: 1806
Merit: 672
Starting with losing 100,000$ a month and they ended up losing more than 2 million dollars for that year is pretty bothersome to me, and I guess this should serve as a wake up call for their government. Obviously this country is cryptocurrency friendly as they even started allocating funds for the implementation of blockchain in their government. But I am also seeing that them being loose when it comes to cryptocurrencies are affecting their citizens as well, this criminals are really taking advantage of the situation right now.
legendary
Activity: 3542
Merit: 1965
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
You cannot calculate the losses based on the upwards and downward volatility of the Bitcoin price. The loss has to be pegged to the Bitcoin or Alt coin price at the time. If this was true, then people would have lost nothing, if the Alt coin or Bitcoin price went to zero.

I am not saying that ICO based scams are not a problem, but it is totally blown out of proportion, because they are using the wrong method to calculated the total losses.
sr. member
Activity: 546
Merit: 252
In its annual report on scams, Australia’s national consumer watchdog has revealed that cryptocurrency-related fraud has cost Australians over AUD $2.1 million in losses last year.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has published its annual ‘targeting scams’ report on Monday, revealing accumulated total losses of some AUD $340 million to scammers from 200,000 scam reports submitted to the authority in 2017 – both figures a new record.

Cryptocurrency-related scams, relatively, account for a fraction of those total losses. Between January and September 2017, the ACCC saw about $100,000 in losses reported every month due to fraudulent activity in cryptocurrencies. However, the meteoric rise in the value of cryptocurrencies in the Q4 2017 coincided with a sharp increase in scams in the sector, the ACCC said.

An excerpt from the report read:

As the value of actual cryptocurrencies increased, so too did the scam losses in what people thought were real investments. By the end of the year, reports of losses related to cryptocurrencies exceeded $2.1 million but as with other scams, this is likely the very tip of the iceberg.

As bitcoin price peaked near $20,000 in December 2017, the number of losses reported to ‘Scamwatch’, the ACCC’s scam-alert domain, exceeded $700,000. Average reported losses had jumped from $1,885 in January to $13,205 by the end the year, the authority said.

As reported in November, scams abusing bitcoin spiked 126% in the space of a week amid a heightened interest by retail investors looking to invest in cryptocurrencies.

Fake initial coin offering (ICO) schemes and pyramid investment schemes purporting to be crypto-investment products were cited as the most common forms of fraud.

‘[Crypto scams] capitalised on the general confusion about how cryptocurrency works and instead of people discovering how to directly buy cryptocurrencies, many found themselves caught up in what were essentially pyramid schemes,’ the ACCC added.

Earlier this year, the ACCC said it received a total of 1,289 public complaints related to cryptocurrency scams in 2017.

https://www.ccn.com/crypto-scams-fake-icos-cost-australians-over-au2-million-in-2017-consumer-watchdog/
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