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Ripple Sounds Alarm: YouTube Flooded With XRP Scams—Here’s How to Spot Them

Ripple Sounds Alarm: YouTube Flooded With XRP Scams—Here’s How to Spot Them

Published:
2025-07-24 09:20:44
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Ripple’s warning lights are flashing red as XRP scams metastasize across YouTube. The platform’s algorithm—better at pushing clickbait than curbing fraud—is now a hunting ground for crypto cons.

How the scams work: Fake ‘giveaways’ and impersonation videos hijack Ripple’s branding, luring victims with promises of free XRP. One tell? Comments disabled—because nothing screams legitimacy like silencing dissent.

Meanwhile, crypto’s wild west shrugs. Another day, another rug pull—but hey, at least the scammers are embracing Web3’s ‘decentralized grift’ ethos.

Ripple CEO issues scam alert

Brad Garlinghouse, Ripple’s CEO, echoed the warning, saying, “Like clockwork, with success and market rallies, scammers ramp up their attacks, PLEASE BEWARE.” He urged users to stay alert and reiterated that neither he nor the company will ever ask for XRP to be sent for any reason.

“We’ll keep reporting these. Please do the same,” he added. In the end, he suggested that “As always, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.”

The surge in scams arrives just as the XRP price posted a surge of more than 42% in the last 30 days. XRP went to breach the $3.6 mark last week, hinting at printing a new ATH before the rally dissolved. XRP is trading at an average price of $3.09 at press time. Its 24-hour trading volume skyrocketed by 136% to stand at $16.66 billion.

Ripple flags a new XRP scam wave on YouTube.

Source: Brad Garlinghouse’s X.

Ripple is still dealing with the high-profile legal battle with the SEC. A proposed $50M settlement is on the table, with a filing deadline set for August 15. These developments have reignited public interest in XRP, giving scammers an opening to exploit FOMO and misinformation.

The fear and greed index is still flashing “Greed” sentiment in the market. However, the cumulative crypto market cap dropped by 2% over the last day to stand at $3.86 trillion. Its 24-hour trading volume spiked by 16% to hit $223 billion.

Ripple reports AI-powered giveaway frauds

Ripple has flagged a surge in fraudulent posts across YouTube, X, Facebook, and Discord. In a report, it has specifically called out scams that span from fake Elon Musk and then Joe Biden giveaway videos to deepfakes of Garlinghouse himself promising free XRP. Some use AI-generated voiceovers and deepfake video overlays. Others replicate real interviews and tack on scam wallet addresses.

In some cases, scammers use Discord groups or fake job offers to funnel users toward malicious links or phishing sites. 

Ripple’s CTO recently flagged a fake 100 million XRP airdrop scam that had gained traction online. He warned that scammers were leveraging post-court-win hype, deepfake videos, and misleading visual overlays to con users. Many of these scams rely on fake urgency, urging viewers to “claim” XRP by sending funds to wallets controlled by fraudsters.

Ripple flags a new XRP scam wave on YouTube.

According to TRM Labs, more than $9 billion was lost to crypto fraud schemes in 2022 alone. Imposter scams accounted for $2.3 billion in reported losses the same year. Between 2021 and 2023, social media–driven scams racked up an estimated $2.7 billion in consumer losses.

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