Over 46,000 People Lose More Than $1 Billion To Crypto Fraud Since 2021, FTC

June 6, 2022

The report found that nearly half of people who reported losing digital currencies to a scam claimed it started with an ad, post, or message on a social media platform. Nearly four out of every ten dollars lost to a scam that began on social media were lost in crypto.

Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp and Telegram were listed as the top social media platforms aiding these cryptocurrency scams. According to the FTC, social media is a potent environment for crypto-fraud.

About $575 million of all losses were linked to digital currency fraud involving “bogus investment opportunities.”

Among the cryptocurrencies used and financial losses, the average reported loss for an individual was $2,600, and bitcoin, tether, and ether were the top cryptocurrencies used by people to facilitate payments to fraudsters.

While the popularity of cryptocurrencies has increased, the positive trend has also attracted fraudsters and crypto criminals, who now see the sector as a new way to launder and make money. Along with the fact that the crypto world is largely unregulated, fraudulent activities will continue to flourish.

The sources for the piece include an article in Reuters.

Top Stories

Related Articles

March 5, 2026 Check Point Software on Wednesday launched a dedicated Canada data region for its CloudGuard Web Application Firewall more...

March 5, 2026 A small development company in Mexico says a compromised Google Cloud API key triggered more than $82,000 more...

March 2, 2026 Thousands of exposed Google Cloud API keys can authenticate to Gemini endpoints when the Generative Language API more...

March 2, 2026 Threat actors are exploiting Microsoft Entra ID through Open Authorization (OAuth) consent abuse, using seemingly legitimate third-party more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn