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Scam alert: Trezor warns users of new phishing attack

Scam alert: Trezor warns users of new phishing attack

The new active phishing attack is trying to steal Trezor users’ crypto by tricking investors into entering their recovery phrase on a fake Trezor site.

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Hardware cryptocurrency wallet provider Trezor has warned its users about a new phishing attack targeting their crypto investments by trying to steal their private keys.

Trezor took to Twitter on Feb. 28 to caution users about an active phishing attack designed to steal investors’ money by making them enter the wallet’s recovery phrase on a fake Trezor website.

The phishing campaign involves attackers posing as Trezor and contacting victims via phone calls, texts or emails claiming that there has been a security breach or suspicious activity on their Trezor account.

“Trezor Suite has recently endured a security breach, assume all your assets are vulnerable,” the fake message reads, inviting users to follow a phishing link to “secure” their Trezor device.

“Please ignore these messages as they are not from Trezor,” Trezor declared on Twitter, emphasizing that the firm will never contact its customers via calls or SMS. The firm added that Trezor has not found any evidence of a database breach.

According to online reports, the latest phishing attack against Trezor customers was launched on Feb. 27, with users being directed to a domain asking to enter their recovery seed. The domain provides a perfectly-made fake Trezor website that prompts users to start securing their wallet by clicking the “Start” button.

After clicking the “Start” button, users will be asked to provide the recovery phrase for their cryptocurrency wallet.

The wallet’s recovery phrase, also known as private keys, is the most important part of self-custody, or “being your own bank” by keeping your crypto on a software or hardware non-custodial wallet. The safety of the recovery phrase is way more important than keeping the hardware wallet safe, and once the private keys are stolen, it means that crypto holdings no longer belong to their original owner.

Related: Notorious Monkey Drainer crypto scammer says they’re ‘shutting down’

The news came shortly after metaverse firm The Sandbox suffered a data breach on Feb. 26, that resulted in a phishing email sent to users.

The latest phishing attack against Trezor customers is not the first scam of such kind. Trezor wallets were also targeted with phishing attacks in April 2022, with attackers contacting Trezor users posing as the company, asking them to download a fake Trezor app.

Such attacks are not exclusive to Trezor though. In 2020, rival hardware wallet firm Ledger suffered a massive data breach, with attackers publicly exposing personal information of more than 270,000 Ledger customers.

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