In crypto, you are your own bank — which means you're also your own security team. There's no fraud department to reverse a mistaken or stolen transfer. The good news: most losses come from a handful of well-known attacks, and a few solid habits defeat the majority of them.
The golden rules
- Never share your seed phrase or private keys. Not with "support," not to "verify" your wallet, not ever. Anyone asking is a scammer.
- Assume unsolicited contact is hostile. Real companies don't DM you first about your wallet.
- Verify every address and URL. Bookmark sites; don't trust search ads or links in messages.
- Slow down. Urgency is the scammer's favorite weapon.
Common scams to recognize
- Phishing: fake websites and emails that mimic real services to steal your login or seed phrase.
- Fake support: impostors in chats/DMs offering to "help" — then asking for your keys or remote access.
- Giveaway scams: "Send 1 coin, get 2 back," often using hacked or impersonated celebrity accounts. Always a theft.
- Rug pulls: a new token is hyped, money pours in, then creators vanish with the funds.
- Pig butchering: a long, friendly relationship (often romance) that slowly steers you into a fake investment platform.
- Malicious approvals: connecting your wallet to a shady site and approving a contract that drains your tokens.
If it guarantees returns, it's a scam. No legitimate investment
guarantees profit. "Risk-free," "guaranteed daily returns," and "double your coins"
are all red flags.
Your security checklist
- Store your seed phrase offline (paper/metal), never digitally, never photographed.
- Use a hardware/cold wallet for long-term holdings.
- Enable strong, app-based two-factor authentication (not SMS where avoidable).
- Use a unique, strong password and a password manager.
- Bookmark official sites; double-check URLs every time.
- Keep large holdings off exchanges you don't need to use daily.
- Periodically review and revoke wallet "approvals" you no longer need.
- Be skeptical of anything unsolicited, urgent, or too good to be true.
If you've been targeted
Stop interacting immediately, move any remaining funds to a fresh, secure wallet (new seed phrase), and revoke suspicious approvals. Report the scam to relevant authorities and the platform involved. Acting fast can save what's left.
Educational only — not financial advice.
CryptoUltimacy explains how things work. We never tell you what to buy, where to
trade, or how to invest. Crypto assets are volatile and high-risk; you can lose
money. Always do your own research and consider speaking with a licensed
professional before making financial decisions.
Key takeaways
- No one legitimate ever needs your seed phrase or private keys.
- Most losses come from phishing, fake support, and "guaranteed" returns.
- Cold storage, app-based 2FA, and skepticism stop most attacks.