Crypto Romance Scam Drains $1.4M

Crypto Romance Scam Drains $1.4M

Researchers at Sophos Labs have unearthed a fraudulent scam that exploits iPhone users looking for love via dating apps. 





Under the CryptoRom scam, victims are contacted through their dating app account. The scammer gains the victim's trust by exchanging direct messages with them. 





"Once the victim becomes familiar, they ask them to install fake trading applications with legitimate looking domains and customer support," wrote researchers.





"They move the conversation to investment and ask them to invest a small amount, and even let them withdraw that money with profit as bait."





Victims are then instructed to buy various financial products or asked to invest in special “profitable” trading events. To lure them into making a big investment, the scammer will offer an in-app loan.





Researchers wrote: "When the victim wants their money back or gets suspicious, they get locked out of the account."





The Sophos team found that most of the scam's victims are iPhone users based in the United States or Europe. Dating apps used to dangle the bait include Bumble, Grindr, Tinder, and Facebook Dating.





Victims have been defrauded of at least $1.4m by CryptoRom. Researchers noted that, "in most cases we have come across, crooks have asked victims to transfer money by buying cryptocurrency through the Binance app and then to a fake trading application." 





The findings echo a report released by Sophos Labs in May concerning scammers abusing dating sites and apps to social-engineer victims into instal ..

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