The rise of “pig butchering” scams and the rising use of generative synthetic intelligence possible lifted revenues from crypto scams to a report excessive in 2024, based on blockchain analytics agency Chainalysis.
Revenue from pig butchering scams, the place perpetrators domesticate relationships with people and persuade them to take part in fraudulent schemes, elevated practically 40 p.c in 2024 from the earlier 12 months, the agency estimated in a report printed on Thursday.
Revenue in 2024 from crypto scams was at the least $9.9 billion (roughly Rs. 85,996 crore), though the determine might rise to a report excessive of $12.4 billion (roughly Rs. 1,07,711 crore) as soon as extra knowledge turns into obtainable, it stated.
“Crypto fraud and scams have continued to increase in sophistication,” Chainalysis researchers stated.
The firm pointed to marketplaces that help pig butchering operations and using GenAI as elements making it simpler and cheaper for scammers to broaden operations.
Indeed, GenAI expertise might probably “exponentially scale crypto scams”, Chainalysis stated.
The firm, which tracks publicly obtainable transaction knowledge on the blockchain to establish rip-off income, stated crypto fraud exercise grew 24 p.c every year on common since 2020.
Cryptocurrencies, most notably Bitcoin, have soared in value and recognition over the previous few years as buyers chased banner returns and curiosity in blockchain expertise soared.
The sector has jumped considerably since US President Donald Trump’s victory within the November election on hopes of a neater regulatory surroundings.
Other significantly profitable scams included crypto drainers, the place scammers pose as blockchain initiatives and take management of victims’ crypto wallets, and high-yield funding scams that promised outsized returns, based on Chainalysis.
In January 2024, a crypto drainer posed because the US Securities and Exchange Commission after the regulator’s X account was compromised.
Cryptocurrency ATMs have additionally been key hotspots for scams, based on Chainalysis, with perpetrators typically impersonating authorities officers or buyer help brokers to persuade victims to deposit money into the machines.
© Thomson Reuters 2025
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