←back to thread

410 points gpi | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
modeless ◴[] No.43998293[source]
I have been receiving regular spear phishing calls from these guys, or someone who bought the leaked data, with classic tactics like claiming that I need to confirm a potentially fraudulent transaction. They speak perfect English with an American accent, sound very friendly, and have knowledge of your account balance. Thankfully on the first call I realized it was a scam right away, and Google's call screening feature takes good care of the rest. Wish I could forward them to Kitboga[1].

I guess they didn't have as much luck as they wanted scamming Coinbase's customers, and once they had their fun they decided to try extorting Coinbase themselves.

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNziOoXDBeg

replies(10): >>43998497 #>>43998546 #>>43998550 #>>43998551 #>>43998639 #>>43999013 #>>43999303 #>>43999425 #>>43999455 #>>44000073 #
panarky ◴[] No.43998551[source]
If you had any significant assets on Coinbase at any time prior to this breach, spear phishing is the least of your worries.

Coinbase not only leaked your full name and address, they also gave up your balances, your transaction history, and images of your government identification.

People with "significant" crypto balances are being assaulted on the street and in their own homes, and family members are being kidnapped for ransom.

"Significant" in this case can be $10k or less.

Until now, your best defense secrecy. Never talk about crypto in public in any way that could be traced to your real-world identity.

Thanks to Coinbase that defense is now gone.

The bad guys can see who has ever had a significant balance on Coinbase (even if they don't right now), whether that balance was sold for cash and how much, or if you've ever transferred tokens off the exchange to a self-custody wallet.

Now the bad guys know who's worth kidnapping for ransom and where you live. For most people, a Google search of your name and home address turns up the names of family members who would would also be lucrative targets for kidnapping and threats of violence.

Coinbase will never be forced to reimburse all the damage they've done because the true cost would bankrupt the company.

replies(12): >>43998696 #>>43998820 #>>43999011 #>>43999267 #>>43999315 #>>43999840 #>>44000135 #>>44000613 #>>44001088 #>>44001777 #>>44002734 #>>44004453 #
zamadatix ◴[] No.43998820[source]
> People with "significant" crypto balances are being assaulted on the street and in their own homes, and family members are being kidnapped for ransom. "Significant" in this case can be $10k or less.

I wonder why, select a person completely at random and by median you'll get just as much from what they have sitting in their checking account. Select a nicer area for an order of magnitude more. That's not encouragement to go assault people in their homes or kidnap families... just confusion.

replies(4): >>43998860 #>>43998883 #>>44000012 #>>44000093 #
Balgair ◴[] No.43998860{3}[source]
Yeah, but banks and the normie monetary system has a lot more safeguards in it when it comes to account transfers. Or at least, they appear to have them.

Crypto? It's wild, and people think it's wild.

replies(2): >>43999682 #>>44000071 #
koakuma-chan ◴[] No.44000071{4}[source]
I tried to use Coinbase a few months ago to pay for something, and I couldn't even make a transaction because it was deemed suspicious, and my account got locked or something.
replies(1): >>44003853 #
1. rsynnott ◴[] No.44003853{5}[source]
Someone with a lot of cryptocurrency in Coinbase is also quite likely (at least relative to the average person) to have lots of on-chain cryptocurrency, too, though.