Futuros
Acesse centenas de contratos perpétuos
TradFi
Ouro
Plataforma única para ativos tradicionais globais
Opções
Hot
Negocie opções vanilla no estilo europeu
Conta unificada
Maximize sua eficiência de capital
Negociação demo
Introdução à negociação de futuros
Prepare-se para sua negociação de futuros
Eventos de futuros
Participe de eventos e ganhe recompensas
Negociação demo
Use fundos virtuais para experimentar negociações sem riscos
Lançamento
CandyDrop
Colete candies para ganhar airdrops
Launchpool
Staking rápido, ganhe novos tokens em potencial
HODLer Airdrop
Possua GT em hold e ganhe airdrops massivos de graça
Launchpad
Chegue cedo para o próximo grande projeto de token
Pontos Alpha
Negocie on-chain e receba airdrops
Pontos de futuros
Ganhe pontos de futuros e colete recompensas em airdrop
Investimento
Simple Earn
Ganhe juros com tokens ociosos
Autoinvestimento
Invista automaticamente regularmente
Investimento duplo
Lucre com a volatilidade do mercado
Soft Staking
Ganhe recompensas com stakings flexíveis
Empréstimo de criptomoedas
0 Fees
Penhore uma criptomoeda para pegar outra emprestado
Centro de empréstimos
Centro de empréstimos integrado
Centro de riqueza VIP
Planos premium de crescimento de patrimônio
Gestão privada de patrimônio
Alocação premium de ativos
Fundo Quantitativo
Estratégias quant de alto nível
Apostar
Faça staking de criptomoedas para ganhar em produtos PoS
Alavancagem Inteligente
New
Alavancagem sem liquidação
Cunhagem de GUSD
Cunhe GUSD para retornos em RWA
Deepfake Youtube Scam Involving Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse Uncovered by Redditors
Last updated: December 21, 2023 03:07 EST . 2 min read
Disclosure: Crypto is a high-risk asset class. This article is provided for informational purposes and does not constitute investment advice. By using this website, you agree to our terms and conditions. We may utilise affiliate links within our content, and receive commission.
Source: PixabayReddit users have identified a deepfake video of Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse asking XRP holders to transfer coins to a certain address, with the promise of doubling their original investment.
Redditor GabeSter shared the deepfake video in a Reddit thread posted on r/Cryptocurrency on Wednesday, asserting that Youtube has refused to remove the video for over a month.
In the unlisted video titled “Calling All Ripple Holders Immediately,” a deepfaked version of Garlinghouse is seen inviting viewers to participate in an “XRP X2” event, saying that Ripple would “double the amount” of XRP sent to an address provided after scanning a bar code.
The video currently has over 20,000 views despite being unlisted and unsearchable on YouTube.
Another Redditor commented that they had observed a similar YouTube ad on both November 25 and December 3. Other participants in the discussion also asserted encountering comparable deepfake ads on the platform.
Despite the obviously fake elements of the ad, GabeSter noted that Google has refused to take down the video, claiming that it does not violate its policies. Redditor Maxx3141 asserted that the reason the video has not been taken down is because it has not been checked by a human.
“My guess is they are using bots to do the work, and these bots are terribly easy to fool,” said Redditor Maxx3141. “But after almost a month, this shit is still airing and I bet they got hundreds if not thousands of reports, but still no one checks it by hand.”
Users on Reddit also posted a link to an unlisted video featuring the deepfake ad on YouTube. GabeSter cautioned others against engaging with the video’s QR code.
This isn’t the first time Garlinghouse’s likeness has been used in a deepfake video scam. Last month, the Ripple CEO posted on X warning XRP holders to watch out for fraudulent schemes and giveaways, after a similar video showcasing Garlinghouse endorsing a fictitious 100 million XRP giveaway and promising to double users’ holdings was published on YouTube
“There’s been an uptick in deepfake scam videos (ex below) overlaying new words with old video footage from Ripple’s events (@YouTube are you asleep at the wheel again?!),” Garlinghouse wrote on X with a screenshot of the aforementioned video. “Reminder: don’t trust, verify (all approved messaging will only come from official Ripple accounts).”
In 2020, both Brad Garlinghouse and Ripple initiated legal proceedings against YouTube, asserting that the video-streaming platform enabled scammers to promote deceptive schemes that negatively impacted their brand and reputation.
The case reached a resolution in 2021 when the involved parties agreed to collaborate in order to prevent, detect, and remove such scams from the platform.