We received two somewhat convincing phishing emails recently from colnbase.support and myethenwallet.com. Hilarious misspelling aside, it’s not so funny if one of these scams tricks you into entering your private information on the bogus websites they provide.
BitcoinWhosWho does not have any bitcoin addresses associated, please report if you know any!
MyEthenWallet
mailer@myethenwallet.com
Hi bitcoinwhoswho.com,
MyEtherWallet has recently been targeted by attackers trying to obtain access to wallets on the Ethereum network.
In order to prevent any other security issues, we have implemented Two Factor Authentication.
However, the Two Factor Authentication wallet security has to be activated by our users manually.In order to set up Two Factor Authentication and to secure your wallet, please visit the link below to upgrade your wallet to the new security protocols.
UPGRADE YOUR WALLET
“PLEASE UPDATE YOUR WALLET ON HERE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE IN ORDER TO MINIMIZE THE RISK OF LOSING FUNDS OR TOKENS.”
Thanks and be well,
kvhnuke @ MyEtherWallet LLC
Colnbase
no-reply@colnbase.support
You just sent0.04804 ETH
Congratulations! You have successfully sent 0.04804 ETH (worth $12.00 USD) to 0x598944a224d65f4F8AD1fB0828308556F11D7543 using Coinbase. To facilitate this transaction, you paid 0.00021 ETH (worth $0.06 USD) in network fees.
This withdrawal is being sent to an address (“0x598944a224d65f4F8AD1fB0828308556F11D7543”) that you haven’t previously used.If you believe your account activity is unauthorized, please click the button below to cancel the transaction and restore access to your account.
Cancel this transaction