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    You are at:Home » Fake Gemini Chatbots Push Coin Scams: The Next Fraud Wave Looks Familiar
    Fake Gemini Chatbots
    Fake Gemini Chatbots
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    Fake Gemini Chatbots Push Coin Scams: The Next Fraud Wave Looks Familiar

    Radio TandilBy Radio Tandil5 March 2026No Comments5 Mins Read23 Views
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    The cryptocurrency world appeared to be almost silent for a while. Not exactly quiet—crypto is rarely quiet—but more subdued than the wild years of 2021 and 2022, when rug pulls were practically a daily occurrence and new tokens appeared hourly. However, something strangely familiar has recently started to reappear in the shadows of the internet under a different guise. This time, artificial intelligence is the mask.

    Users have begun coming across chatbots claiming to be powered by Google’s AI system, Gemini, on Discord servers, Telegram channels, and obscure investment forums. Initially, the bots appear realistic. They talk about market trends, provide prompt answers to inquiries, and even come up with investment plans. After chatting amiably for a few minutes, they start suggesting new cryptocurrency tokens. The trap typically snaps shut there.

    CategoryDetails
    Technology Being ImitatedGemini AI chatbot
    Real Company Behind GeminiGoogle
    Scam TypeCryptocurrency investment and token promotion scams
    Main TacticsFake AI chatbots, social media impersonation, Telegram groups
    Typical VictimsRetail crypto investors and AI enthusiasts
    Common Platforms UsedTelegram, Discord, X (Twitter), scam websites
    Financial ImpactMillions of dollars lost across multiple global incidents
    Regulatory OversightFederal Trade Commission and international cybercrime units
    First Major Reports2024–2025 surge in AI impersonation scams
    Reference Sourcehttps://www.ftc.gov

    Anyone who has watched previous cryptocurrency bubbles materialize will find the pattern oddly familiar. A chatbot recommends a “high-potential coin,” which is frequently defined as having ties to decentralized computing or AI infrastructure. Links show up; they can be straightforward token addresses or slickly designed websites. Investors are advised to act fast. early access. restricted supply. huge benefit. By then, it’s possible that some users have already sensed a problem. However, many don’t.

    The chatbot’s convincingly human behavior contributes to the illusion’s effectiveness. Price charts, blockchain updates, and general technological trends are all covered in the responses, which come naturally. One gets the impression from watching the exchange that it was intended to be more of a friendly consultation with a helpful AI assistant than a sales pitch. And that little change counts.

    Crypto scams used to come in the form of awkward emails or poorly crafted messages on social media. The new wave has a distinct feel. Before bringing up a token, these chatbots establish trust through multiple exchanges. The exchange already feels strangely intimate by the time the suggestion is made. The experience can be so meticulously staged that it’s difficult to ignore it.

    A user described conversing with what seemed to be a Gemini-based assistant for almost ten minutes before any mention of cryptocurrency appeared in one extensively shared example that went viral in investor forums. Artificial intelligence models were the first topic of discussion, which then veered toward blockchain technology before settling on a token purportedly connected to “AI compute markets.” As it happened, the token had very little liquidity. Early purchasers found out the coin’s creators had vanished within a few days.

    The monetary losses differ greatly. Some victims claim to have lost several hundred dollars. Others report transferring thousands of dollars into token-tied wallets that nearly instantly crashed. According to researchers examining the pattern, the operators depend on volume—many small investments as opposed to a few big ones.

    Whether these scams are operated by looser groups of opportunistic developers or organized criminal networks is still unknown. It seems possible that several groups are simultaneously experimenting with comparable strategies, imitating strategies that seem to be effective. The strategy itself is undoubtedly not new.

    This film has already been seen by the cryptocurrency community. Scammers posed as well-known investors, exchange executives, and even support personnel from major trading platforms during past market booms. Now, the authority figure being impersonated is neither a company employee nor a celebrity. It is a form of artificial intelligence. That change seems strangely reasonable.

    Artificial intelligence systems are inherently credible. They are regarded as unbiased, analytical, and data-driven. When investors engage with what they perceive to be a potent algorithm, they might believe that the suggestions are the result of a secret model that analyzes thousands of market signals. However, these bots’ “AI” is typically just a scripted interface.

    Many of the chatbots, according to security researchers, seem to have been constructed using common language-model APIs and are encased in interfaces meant to mimic official AI assistants. Sometimes the wording, color schemes, and branding are so similar to Gemini’s public interface that inexperienced users might not notice the difference. That has a subtle irony to it.

    Scams are becoming easier to scale thanks to the same generative AI technology that promises to automate writing, coding, and research. Dozens of chatbot instances can be operated concurrently by a single operator, interacting with potential victims 24/7.

    Regulators are starting to take notice. The Federal Trade Commission and other organizations have already issued warnings about the sharp increase in AI impersonation scams in a variety of industries. It just so happens that cryptocurrency is the most productive. It’s practically encouraged by the surroundings.

    Investors in cryptocurrencies have a tendency to act swiftly, frequently following early signals in rapidly shifting markets. When you combine that culture with the enigma of artificial intelligence, it becomes potent. It appears that investors think the bots may have knowledge that others do not. They sometimes pay a price for that belief.

    There is a slight feeling of déjà vu as you watch the trend develop. Technology evolves. Buzzwords change over time. DeFi came first, followed by NFTs and now AI tokens. However, the scam’s fundamental elements—the urgency, the early access promise, and the vanishing developers—remain obstinately constant. The tools might be more intelligent now. Strangely enough, the fraud isn’t.

    Fake Gemini Chatbots
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