Author

Topic: Beware: Blockchain.info phishing email (Read 292 times)

legendary
Activity: 3192
Merit: 1198
Bons.io Telegram Casino
October 18, 2019, 10:15:09 AM
#21
It's looks like there is another phishing attempt going on using Blockchain.info

Quote
Many users including Reddit user fulber34 stated that he received an email from blockchain.info with the title as “Warning: Don’t get locked out of your blockchain” and it said that the website is upgrading their database, and they require the validation of users wallet details on their website. This can be another phishing scam as a blockchain website would never ask for validation of personal details.

https://coinnounce.com/beware-blockchain-info-phishing-email/

Just giving you a heads-up guys, if you received such email, don't give such informations and check where the email come from.

People should never click any of those clicks, there is such thing as email redirection I was a victim of that my own I receive email using my domain name, it's better to login to your blockchain.info account and from there you can see their newsletter if they have maintenance ongoing, better check that if they have that inside the blockchain site.
hero member
Activity: 2884
Merit: 620
August 17, 2019, 03:50:15 PM
#20
i got it last week ago from blockchain.info : [email protected]
email said : i got stellar airdrop and must follow it 'website below'!!. about $300,000,000 stellar give away by follow the link
It's an obvious scam attempt with that email. The email that blockchain.com used to contact is through their domain. I've checked my email and the automatic reply that I get is from:

[email protected]
Its a phishing attempt,the legit ones looks like
Nope it's not a phishing attempt, I used to receive a 2FA email from them through that email domain. It came from their old domain and there's no personal information that's being asked.

It's just an email about authorization login that and after authorizing, it redirects to their original website so no worries. I think those who have registered when their domain was still '.info' receives the same or its just me.
hero member
Activity: 2688
Merit: 625
August 16, 2019, 05:02:21 PM
#19
Its a phishing attempt,the legit ones looks like

http://i67.tinypic.com/5a5kq1.png
The difference between [email protected] and [email protected] is nothing. Email spoofing can be done super easily, so never blindly trust an email just because it says it came from the email address X - even if it matches the legit one. What matters is the content of the email. Is it asking for personal informations? Does the links inside of it match with the real website? etc...
Correct,which there should always be a verification when you do engage into things and your own common sense will tell you that and some sort of research.
For us users who might have some hesitance into some things its better to clarify it out because the primary reason why we are being hacked is due to our carelessness and laziness.
legendary
Activity: 2758
Merit: 6830
August 16, 2019, 04:47:20 PM
#18
Its a phishing attempt,the legit ones looks like

http://i67.tinypic.com/5a5kq1.png
The difference between [email protected] and [email protected] is nothing. Email spoofing can be done super easily, so never blindly trust an email just because it says it came from the email address X - even if it matches the legit one. What matters is the content of the email. Is it asking for personal informations? Does the links inside of it match with the real website? etc...
hero member
Activity: 2688
Merit: 625
August 16, 2019, 04:21:35 PM
#17
i got it last week ago from blockchain.info : [email protected]
email said : i got stellar airdrop and must follow it 'website below'!!. about $300,000,000 stellar give away by follow the link
It's an obvious scam attempt with that email. The email that blockchain.com used to contact is through their domain. I've checked my email and the automatic reply that I get is from:

[email protected]
Its a phishing attempt,the legit ones looks like

hero member
Activity: 2884
Merit: 620
August 16, 2019, 12:29:14 AM
#16
i got it last week ago from blockchain.info : [email protected]
email said : i got stellar airdrop and must follow it 'website below'!!. about $300,000,000 stellar give away by follow the link
It's an obvious scam attempt with that email. The email that blockchain.com used to contact is through their domain. I've checked my email and the automatic reply that I get is from:

[email protected]
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 3
August 15, 2019, 07:57:16 PM
#15
i got it last week ago from blockchain.info : [email protected]
email said : i got stellar airdrop and must follow it 'website below'!!. about $300,000,000 stellar give away by follow the link
hero member
Activity: 2884
Merit: 620
August 08, 2019, 05:38:36 AM
#14
Most probably those who received such emails are those users who have emails used in other crypto-related websites such as cloud mining since the owner of such sites can sell those email list to someone who is interested of using those info for such scheme.
And probably those ICO related sites that offered airdrops before. I saw those before and someone offered on the marketplace(altcoins) that hundreds of thousands of crypto related email on his database.

Those who are aware of the website's update, it's no longer '.info' but still sad to think that there might be few that will be caught as a victim of this phishing link. Thanks for the heads up baofeng.

No matter how many times we do alert or advise on most people about phishing links and giving out some suggestions to avoid themselves into those things but there were still who do got victimized and this is why these kind of phishing attempts do still exist because of these noobs that to do continue to feed em up and also even just with your own
common sense you can spot out a legit on a fake one.
There are people who are not techie regarding these phishing sites and it's the reality that happens daily that there are who keeps falling on that trap. I feel bad about them but they can't look the difference between the legit and the fake one.

They'll learn once they experienced it. If they can just ignore and don't click any of those links attached to those emails, they can be safe even though they are not techie.
legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1789
August 08, 2019, 02:52:47 AM
#13
Is it a data breached? How come those fraudsters able to acquire an email list registered at Coinbase and Binance. I know they do random sending but just wondering here.

It's possible. Or maybe your email provider sells their addresses database to a 3rd party and they got it from there. Or you somehow forget and type it online on the internet.

My primary email which I used to register at my local exchange never has phishing email though. On the other hand, my public email got spam/phishing email every hour or so.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1398
For support ➡️ help.bc.game
August 07, 2019, 06:41:55 PM
#12

Even those with no accounts at Blockchain.info also received the email. I'm using separate emails from different exchanges e.g Coinbase, Binance, Kucoin, Bittrex, our local exchange, etc. The one I used on Coinbase and Binance received the phishing email (registered with the same email).

Is it a data breached? How come those fraudsters able to acquire an email list registered at Coinbase and Binance. I know they do random sending but just wondering here.
legendary
Activity: 3038
Merit: 1330
Slava Ukraini!
August 07, 2019, 06:27:05 PM
#11
I've lost count how many times I've got similar emails. But I'm not paying attention to it. I can tell from first sight that email message is fake. Usually it's enough to look at email address of sender and domain of it. But we, people who have enough experience in crypt isn't their main target. Usually newbies are falling into these scams, and unfortunately we can't do much to enough them...
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1094
August 07, 2019, 02:20:56 PM
#10
I get such mails every week and they end up directly in the spam box which get deleted as well. As the emails of bitcointalk were compromised, hence many users (including me) are receiving such emails as nobody can guess that we are aware of blockchain and bitcoins. I receive PayPal login mails too and mails from exchanges.
hero member
Activity: 2926
Merit: 722
August 07, 2019, 02:12:00 PM
#9
Most probably those who received such emails are those users who have emails used in other crypto-related websites such as cloud mining since the owner of such sites can sell those email list to someone who is interested of using those info for such scheme.
And probably those ICO related sites that offered airdrops before. I saw those before and someone offered on the marketplace(altcoins) that hundreds of thousands of crypto related email on his database.

Those who are aware of the website's update, it's no longer '.info' but still sad to think that there might be few that will be caught as a victim of this phishing link. Thanks for the heads up baofeng.

No matter how many times we do alert or advise on most people about phishing links and giving out some suggestions to avoid themselves into those things but there were still who do got victimized and this is why these kind of phishing attempts do still exist because of these noobs that to do continue to feed em up and also even just with your own
common sense you can spot out a legit on a fake one.
hero member
Activity: 2884
Merit: 620
August 05, 2019, 06:35:59 PM
#8
Most probably those who received such emails are those users who have emails used in other crypto-related websites such as cloud mining since the owner of such sites can sell those email list to someone who is interested of using those info for such scheme.
And probably those ICO related sites that offered airdrops before. I saw those before and someone offered on the marketplace(altcoins) that hundreds of thousands of crypto related email on his database.

Those who are aware of the website's update, it's no longer '.info' but still sad to think that there might be few that will be caught as a victim of this phishing link. Thanks for the heads up baofeng.
copper member
Activity: 2142
Merit: 1305
Limited in number. Limitless in potential.
August 04, 2019, 11:08:15 AM
#7
^ I am just lucky I visit on this board, that brings awareness to everyone including me. But so far I did not receive email from the blockchain.com since I have an account there and still active right now.
Most probably those who received such emails are those users who have emails used in other crypto-related websites such as cloud mining since the owner of such sites can sell those email list to someone who is interested of using those info for such scheme.
hero member
Activity: 2590
Merit: 644
August 04, 2019, 10:38:12 AM
#6
Just giving you a heads-up guys, if you received such email, don't give such informations and check where the email come from.
^ I am just lucky I visit on this board, that brings awareness to everyone including me. But so far I did not receive email from the blockchain.com since I have an account there and still active right now.

~snip~
It is recommended that you use a new email address for every (non garbage) service. People tend to use one single email address for a wide variety of services where just one database hack is enough to fill up your mailbox with phishing mails and who knows what else. Poor newbies.  Lips sealed
^ Good suggestion, it should separate the email address in your blockchain.com wallet.
legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1427
August 03, 2019, 08:35:25 AM
#5
Just giving you a heads-up guys, if you received such email, don't give such informations and check where the email come from.

It's useful to also report the domain used for this phishing attack to both Blockchain and the site they registered their domain at. If enough people report it, the account behind these domain and probably a lot more domains should be terminated because this is definitely in conflict with their TOS and highly illegal by law.

It is recommended that you use a new email address for every (non garbage) service. People tend to use one single email address for a wide variety of services where just one database hack is enough to fill up your mailbox with phishing mails and who knows what else. Poor newbies.  Lips sealed
legendary
Activity: 2492
Merit: 3612
Buy/Sell crypto at BestChange
August 03, 2019, 08:18:34 AM
#4
It looks like this email is very dangerous, as it comes at a time when many people, including myself, are getting errors when trying to log-in into the wallet, I can’t access to my wallet (old versions.)

Most old wallets do not allow you to access their updated database so it is best to avoid using this wallet and trying to use any trusted one. (Keep your seed save)
copper member
Activity: 2142
Merit: 1305
Limited in number. Limitless in potential.
August 02, 2019, 08:15:19 PM
#3
Thanks for posting this. I think this should be posted on beginners and help and should not be tolerated even its an old and obvious scam, lots of newbies here in CT using blockchain.com's wallet without prior knowledge of any kind of scams.
jr. member
Activity: 58
Merit: 1
August 02, 2019, 07:19:25 AM
#2
There is a coinbase wallet scam going on as well,you get notification inside email saying someone is trying to login your account from unknown location,that you need to change your password and once you click on that link it will direct you to a fake coinbase link that almost looks so real
legendary
Activity: 2576
Merit: 1655
August 02, 2019, 06:23:21 AM
#1
It's looks like there is another phishing attempt going on using Blockchain.info

Quote
Many users including Reddit user fulber34 stated that he received an email from blockchain.info with the title as “Warning: Don’t get locked out of your blockchain” and it said that the website is upgrading their database, and they require the validation of users wallet details on their website. This can be another phishing scam as a blockchain website would never ask for validation of personal details.

https://coinnounce.com/beware-blockchain-info-phishing-email/

Just giving you a heads-up guys, if you received such email, don't give such informations and check where the email come from.
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