Ethereum dust attacks surge as stablecoin transfers spike

Grafa
Ethereum dust attacks surge as stablecoin transfers spike
Ethereum dust attacks surge as stablecoin transfers spike
Heidi Cuthbert
Written by Heidi Cuthbert
Share

Researchers are warning of a sharp rise in address poisoning scams across Ethereum following the network’s Fusaka upgrade.

Analysis of blockchain data showed a surge in dust transactions, particularly involving stablecoins such as USDT and USDC.

Data shared by Wise Crypto indicated that USDT transfers under $0.01 increased by 612%, rising from roughly 4.2 million to nearly 29.9 million transactions.

USDC dust transfers also climbed significantly, increasing by 473% from 2.6 million to about 14.7 million transactions.

Address poisoning scams work by inserting fake wallet addresses with similar starting and ending characters into a user’s transaction history.

Attackers hope users will mistakenly copy these spoofed addresses when sending funds, particularly because many wallets display shortened address formats.

In one reported case, an address poisoning attack led to losses of about $50 million after a victim copied a fraudulent address from their transaction history.

Blockchain explorers such as Etherscan said lower transaction fees after the Fusaka upgrade have made large-scale dust attack campaigns cheaper and easier to run.

Security researchers advise users to verify full wallet addresses before transferring funds and avoid copying addresses directly from recent transaction records.

At the time of reporting, Ethereum price was $2,185.46.

Perguntas frequentes

Conecte-se conosco

A Grafa não é um consultor financeiro. Você deve buscar aconselhamento independente, jurídico, financeiro, tributário ou de outra natureza que se relacione às suas circunstâncias únicas.

A Grafa não se responsabiliza por qualquer perda causada, seja por negligência ou de outra forma, decorrente do uso ou da confiança nas informações fornecidas direta ou indiretamente pelo uso desta plataforma.