Unsuspecting crypto users lost more than $1.6 million to the scammers via address addiction attacks this week.
On Friday, the victim lost around $636,500 worth of 140 ether (ETH) worth about $636,500 after copying the wrong address from contaminated relocation history, according to the Crypto Scam Provention Platform scamsniffer.
“The user basically sent 140 ETH to a look-like address that sowed history after a mistake in copy-pasting,” the team added, “it was only a matter of time before the trap worked, as his history was full of poison address attacks.”
Another victim lost $880,000 worth of cryptography on Sunday to deal with addiction, but other alerts show that one crypto user lost $80,000 and another lost $62,000.
Cointelegraph, which compiled alerts from cybersecurity companies, has discovered that over $1.6 million has been lost to scammers through this method since Sunday throughout March.
Nearly one million people will be lost to the dostress addiction scam address. One wallet may have poisoned history, and the same owner may have recurred a stuck transfer from three more wallets.
– Cointelegraph (@cointelegraph) August 12, 2025
Address addiction relies on mimic addresses
Address addiction involves sending small transactions from wallet addresses similar to legal addresses, causing users to copy the wrong addresses when creating future transactions.
“Poison sends small transfers from addresses that mimic real addresses, so copying from history is a trap,” says Web3 Antivirus, which offers blockchain security solutions.
Related: Jameson Lopp alarms with Bitcoin Address Addiction Attack
This leads to a “trade history addiction” in which the scammer sends a fake transfer with a similar address and appears in the victim’s transaction history. The victim will copy the fake address and send the funds to the scammer, the scammer explained Friday.

Malicious Signature Signature
According to the fraudster, at least $600,000 was lost from victims who signed malicious phishing signatures, including “approval,” “increased,” and “permission” signatures, in addition to the theft of a $1 million address addiction.
On Tuesday, the victim lost $165,000 worth of blocks and dolo tokens after signing a malicious signature, the scammer said.
“We sound like a broken record, but it’s worth mentioning again. Use an address book or a whitelist to verify the entire address,” writes Scamsniffer.
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