Scammers operating in the crypto space show alarming persistence—they rack up millions from fraudulent schemes, yet continue their activities even after being exposed in previous cons. Rather than disappearing once caught, many simply rebrand or shift tactics, launching fresh scams targeting new victims. This pattern reveals a systemic challenge in Web3: while law enforcement and platforms work to identify bad actors, the barrier to entry for fraud remains concerningly low, allowing repeat offenders to resurface with different schemes.
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BlockchainNewbie
· 6h ago
Look at these scammers, it's really outrageous. They finish one round of scams and then switch to a different disguise to continue. The legal enforcement agencies can't keep up.
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AirdropHuntress
· 10h ago
Repackaging and changing the wallet address to become a hero again—this trick has long been blacklisted after research and analysis, yet new rookies keep pouring in continuously.
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StealthDeployer
· 01-03 22:55
Just messing around with a shell, what about the real technical threshold? Web3 has been drained like this.
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GasFeeDodger
· 01-03 22:41
Switching to a different disguise in Web3 to continue scamming—this trick is really clever.
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AirdropGrandpa
· 01-03 22:40
This is the magic of Web3... changing skins to scam new newbies again.
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BetterLuckyThanSmart
· 01-03 22:34
These scammers are truly indestructible cockroaches; they just change disguise and come back again.
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BTCWaveRider
· 01-03 22:29
This is outrageous. One wave after another of scams, changing disguises to continue the deception? This is how Web3 gets ruined.
Scammers operating in the crypto space show alarming persistence—they rack up millions from fraudulent schemes, yet continue their activities even after being exposed in previous cons. Rather than disappearing once caught, many simply rebrand or shift tactics, launching fresh scams targeting new victims. This pattern reveals a systemic challenge in Web3: while law enforcement and platforms work to identify bad actors, the barrier to entry for fraud remains concerningly low, allowing repeat offenders to resurface with different schemes.