This is painful to see, and unfortunately, it’s not rare Address poisoning isn’t a “user mistake,” it’s a UX failure. Humans were never meant to verify 42-character strings under pressure. In traditional finance, similar errors can be reversed through verification layers. In crypto, once it’s sent, it’s gone. This is exactly why @snowball_money MNS exists. We believe people should stop sending money to wallet addresses altogether. Web3 usernames were built to remove this entire class of risk, not just for crypto, but for any digital value transfer. If the cost is a barrier to claiming your username, you can claim one for free with @snowball_money MNS by commenting "Universal Identity" on this post. Our mission is simple: make crypto sending and receiving error-free, and save billions lost every year to preventable mistakes. We can do better as an industry, and we must.

Cointelegraph
@Cointelegraph
12-20
🚨 ALERT: A copy-paste slip sent nearly $50M USDT to a scam address. Address poisoning plants look-alike wallets in your history. Avoid it by checking the full address, using whitelists, and copying only from the original source.
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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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