It happened again.
A fake press release fooled cryptocurrency evangelists, investors, and media outlets into believing the grocer would be accepting crypto as a form of payment at its stores.
On Friday morning, headlines startedpopping up claiming that the grocery store chain Kroger was going to allow customers to pay in-stores using an alternative cryptocurrency called Bitcoin Cash.
The news was based on a release, Kroger to Accept Bitcoin Cash This Holiday Season, published by PR Newswire, a major press release distributor. The press release even made it across the Bloomberg Terminal, a system used by the financial sector to monitor the latest market moves.
"The Kroger Co. America's largest grocery retailer, announced today that it will begin accepting Bitcoin Cash," read the release. "Starting December 1, 2021, the entire Kroger Family of Stores will accept Bitcoin Cash for all in-store and online purchases."
One problem: The press release was fake. Kroger stores will not be accepting Bitcoin Cash.
"This morning a press release was fraudulently issued claiming to be The Kroger Co that falsely stated the organization will begin to accept Bitcoin Cash," said the company in a statement provided to Reuters. "This communication was fraudulent and is unfounded and should be disregarded."
The situation was really confusing to those who shared the news, mainly because the press release was actually sharedon Kroger's own website.
How did this happen? According to Kroger, its corporate site automatically pulls its own press releases from PR Newswire. All the forger had to do was get the fake past PR Newswire and then it would automatically appear on the company's official website.
It's unclear how this fake press release was published. It has since been removed from both PR Newswire and Kroger's website.
Mashable has reached out to PR Newswire for more information and will update this piece when if hear back.
It's important to note that Bitcoin Cash is not Bitcoin. It's a completely separate cryptocurrencythat was formed after a dispute within the Bitcoin community in 2017. As a result of the dispute, one side split from Bitcoin, called a hard fork, creating its own cryptocurrency known as Bitcoin Cash.
It's likely that the intent behind the false story was to pump the value of the coin. Bitcoin Cash was hovering around the $600 mark on cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase before the press release was published. After the news hit, its price jumped to around $636. Now that the Kroger's press release has been deemed to be fake, Bitcoin Cash is sitting under $600 again.
If this all sounds familiar, it's because this very same thing happened less than two months ago when a fake press release claimed that Walmart would be accepting Litecoin, another alternative cryptocurrency. After the fake Walmart story hit the newswires, Litecoin's value skyrocketed from $170 to around $230 in a matter of minutes. Litecoin's value soon plummeted back down when the press release was deemed to be fake.
Just like the fake Walmart announcement regarding Litecoin in September, that alone should have been a red flag. Why would these major retailers start accepting cryptocurrency by partnering with anything but the most popular: Bitcoin?
Cryptocurrency scams are certainly not new, but these fake press releases are a sneaky new strategy. And, now that crypto fraudsters know that these fakes work, we'll likely start seeing a lot more.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
No, Kroger won't accept Bitcoin Cash. Fake cryptocurrency press release dupes people again.-声闻过情网
sitemap
文章
7955
浏览
2434
获赞
19378
Yes, you can teach your cat to fetch
It's not just dogs who love the art of retrieval. Quite a few cat owners report that their feline frApple reportedly cancels plans for iPhone subscription service
Apple has apparently shelved its plans for an iPhone hardware subscription service. It's just as welThis British DJ is dropping beats from Mt. Everest
British DJ Paul Oakenfold is taking his love for music to new heights ... literally.The 53-year-oldAI Agents Explained: The Next Evolution in Artificial Intelligence
Interacting with AI chatbots like ChatGPT can be fun and sometimes useful, but the next level of eveInstagram's 'Hashtag Mindfulness' boom: The good, the bad, and the ugly
March Mindfulness is our new series that examines the explosive growth in mindfulness and meditationThe Royal Family celebrates the Queen's 91st birthday by sharing special photos on Twitter
Turning 91 years old is certainly something to be celebrated -- no matter who you are. Queen ElizabeLive BBC interview gets derailed by bizarrely awkward man
Oh how we love an awkward TV blunder. In the aftermath of BBC Dad, a clip of another gloriously awkwDon't Buy a GPU Now: Wait for Next
It's the holiday shopping season, and that means many of you are likely considering a new graphics cMom faceswaps her kid with Thomas the Tank Engine, and it's incredibly cursed
Faceswaps are inherently pretty terrifying. Who thought this was a good idea? The proportions neverCarter's UFO hounded him for years. Few knew his expertise in astronomy.
After calls with foreign leaders, rap sessions with lawmakers, and long classified briefings with adEssential Apps to Install on your Windows PC or Mac
You just bought a new laptop, built a new desktop PC, or are simply clean installing on a new solidGoogle CEO sends touching note to staff following YouTube shooting
Google's CEO Sundar Pichai has sent a note to all staff in the company following a shooting at YouTuTwitter admits it went too far with '5G causes COVID
Even Twitter admits it was too heavy-handed with its misinformation labels for posts about COVID-19,BMW, Chrysler, Ford, Kia, more unite to launch electric
Automakers around the U.S. really, really want you to drive an electric car. A group of car companieBest Samsung TV deal: Save $1,700 on Samsung S84D 4K OLED TV
SAVE $1,700:As of Jan. 7, Samsung's 77-inch S84D 4K OLED Smart TV is on sale at Best Buy for $1,599.