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#稳定币 Just finished reviewing the follow-up on the 50 million USDT phishing case, and I want to sound a warning to everyone—this incident exposed the risk of "address poisoning," and we crypto enthusiasts must stay vigilant.
Here's a simple summary of the scam: The phishing attacker generated addresses with the first and last three characters identical. Victims copied the address directly from recent transaction records and transferred 50 million USDT. Why is it so easy to fall for? Because both wallets and browsers truncate addresses with ellipses (0xbaf4b1aF...B6495F8b5), making it impossible to see the middle part clearly.
This gives us a very clear lesson:
**Step 1**: Always compare the full address before each transfer. Don’t be lazy and just expand all characters. Switch the address bar to "Show All" mode before copying.
**Step 2**: Be especially cautious when transferring stablecoins like USDT and DAI, as these assets are the favorite targets for phishing scammers due to their quick convertibility.
**Step 3**: Use blockchain explorers to verify the authenticity of addresses. Never trust truncated displays.
Honestly, someone lost 50 million this time, but it also teaches us a free lesson—only by paying attention to security details can we truly earn stable income from airdrops. Don’t let phishing scammers cut you off. Spend an extra 5 seconds verifying the address before transferring; what you save might be 50 million.