Binance’s CZ Sounds Alarm on Meme-Coin Chaos After 4-Figure Losses
Key Takeaways:
- Changpeng Zhao (CZ) of Binance warns that hackers are hijacking social-media accounts to promote fraudulent meme-coins and drain wallets.
- Attackers are leveraging compromised accounts, even verified ones to post what appear like legitimate Contract Addresses (CAs) for airdrops and new tokens.
- The broader crypto industry sees this as a growing “targeted disaster” for retail traders chasing high-volatility meme-coins without proper verification.
The crypto world is facing a surge in social-media-driven scams tied to the meme-coin frenzy of 2025, and CZ’s message is clear: this isn’t just hype, it’s a full-scale risk for anyone connected to yolo trades or FOMO-driven token launches.
Read More: BNB Chain’s 3.8M-Follower X Account Hacked: CZ Issues Urgent WalletConnect Phishing Alert
Meme-Coin Mania Meets Social-Media Hijacks
Meme-coins have become a dominant force this year, with tokens backed by jokes or pop-culture references routinely reaching eight-digit market caps. But the hype comes with danger. According to recent analysis, hackers are increasingly targeting social media accounts both personal and project-related to push fake tokens and extract funds.
CZ’s warning is grounded in real incidents. In one example, the official X (formerly Twitter) account of BNB Chain was compromised and used to publish fake wallet-connect links and airdrop announcements. Victims who followed the link implicitly gave access to their wallets.
These scams work because they exploit both hype and trust. hype in meme-coins, trust in verified or otherwise well-known accounts.
How The Scam Works from Wormhole to Wallet Drainer
Anatomy of a Social-Media Meme-Coin Scam
- Account Compromise – Hackers compromise the social media account of either a known person or project, and they can do it through the stolen credentials or with minimal effort through weak 2FA.
- Fake Token Announcement – The hacked account posts about a new meme-token, and frequently includes a statement that they want people to connect a wallet, “claim airdrop”, or buy early before “listing”.
- Wallet Connect / Contract Address Trap – The link takes victims to link wallets or send money to a contract address. This gives the consent and allows fraudsters to empty these pockets in the future.
- Pump & Dump – The token is launched (often on Solana or other chains where tokens can be spun up easily), price pumps via social proof, then the scammers dump holdings, leaving buyers with worthless tokens.
- Exit & Cover-Up – This also involves the release of the token (routinely on Solana or other chains where tokens can be effortlessly spinned up), social proof pumps the price, and the scammers dump (and leave the purchasers with useless tokens).
Because the method leverages social engineering rather than purely technical hacking, it’s especially dangerous: the user willingly (but unknowingly) gives up access by connecting their wallet. The $MBAPPE meme scenario cited by Merkle Science is a case in point.
Why This Threat Is So Potent Now
- Meme-coins are booming: Their speculative nature, viral marketing and mass FOMO make them ideal vehicles for fast profit and fast fraud.
- Social platforms are soft targets: Many accounts lack strong security, and users rarely verify contract addresses or token legitimacy. As CZ noted: “official accounts do not endorse any specific memes.”
- Wallet-connect abuse: Because wallet-connect links are trusted, once a user approves them, the hacker gains permissions to move assets.
- Low regulatory clarity: Many meme-coins operate in limbo, making enforcement and recovery difficult when scams occur.
In short, the hype machines are on, the doors to wallets are open, and the security defenses are weak.
Read More: CZ Fires Back at Bloomberg’s “Hit Piece” on Trump-Linked Stablecoin, Lawsuit on the Table?
What Users & Projects Must Do to Protect Themselves
- Always verify sources: Despite being verified, an account may still be compromised, not to mention that one should not assume that just because the handle has a blue tick, it is legit.
- Check contract addresses independently: Match official sites, cross-check through explorers, and investigate the distribution of tokens and audit status.
- Never attach your wallet to the unsolicited “claim airdrop” links unless you are completely certain of the legitimacy of a campaign.
- Enable strong account security: Two-factor authentication (2FA), password rotation, and warning mechanisms can minimize the possibility of a takeover.
- Projects and influencers should consider their access to social-media as any other aspect of their security perimeter: secure it, observe it, and have back-ups.
For crypto platforms like Binance, this issue is not minor, it threatens not just users but overall trust. CZ’s public alert helps raise awareness, but awareness alone is not enough.
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