Crypto-scams seem to have penetrated the industry to promote a few individual cryptos. Likewise, high-profile social media accounts have also fallen victim to unethical activities by hackers to promote crypto-scams. This could include both Bitcoin, as well as altcoins to achieve their agenda.
The present episode, in many ways, is no different either.
One of the largest firms within the audit and assurance sector, PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC)’s Venezuelan branch, is the latest to fall victim to the same. This time – An XRP-related scam.
The verified Twitter account, in order to promote the blatantly obvious XRP scam, recently tweeted,
<p lang=«en» dir=«ltr» xml:lang=«en»>#xrp go go go………… https://t.co/rcG6ZP8ak1— PwC Venezuela (@PwC_Venezuela) September 4, 2022
In order to promote the alleged scam, the blog added,
“To celebrate the global power of #XRP we are proud to announce initiating the annual airdrop pool of 100 000 000 XRP to every Ripple user. Nothing we do at Ripple Labs would be possible without our community, and this is just a part of our efforts to assert that.”
In fact to further inject some certainty, hackers associated this big event with the presence of Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse.
Now, there is one important Q to be asked here. Did the aforementioned in any way have any impact on XRP’s performance on the charts?
Surprisingly, yes. XRP, at the time of writing, was up by 3% as it traded above $0.33 on the charts. As a matter of fact, XRP’s trading volume saw a much-needed uptick, one that helped stabilise its falling curve.
Source: Santiment
At press time, XRP’s trading volume was around the 350M-mark, with the same still appreciating on the charts. What this underlined was that traders/investors, irrespective of
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