TechFlow reports that on March 18, according to on-chain security analyst Scam Sniffer (@realScamSniffer), approximately seven hours ago, a user mistakenly sent $103,100 to a scam address after copying an incorrect address from compromised transaction history. Additionally, about 14 hours earlier, another user lost $43,674 in the same manner.
The "transaction history contamination attack" involves scammers sending fake transactions with similar-looking addresses, causing the fraudulent addresses to appear in users' transaction histories. When users make subsequent transfers, they inadvertently copy and use these fake addresses.




