Share this article
Trump Campaign Website Hit by Hackers Touting Crypto Scam
The U.S. president's campaign website was briefly compromised on Tuesday as hackers looked to fleece cryptocurrency from unsuspecting supporters in the final days before the 2020 election.
Updated Sep 14, 2021, 10:24 a.m. Published Oct 28, 2020, 9:00 a.m. 2 min read
U.S. President Donald Trump's campaign website was briefly compromised on Tuesday as hackers looked to fleece cryptocurrency from unsuspecting supporters in the final days before the 2020 election.
- The attack, which lasted less than 30 minutes, saw the website defaced with messages claiming the hackers had compromising information on Trump and his family.
- As reported by The New York Times, the hackers were soliciting donations in the monero cryptocurrency due to its privacy-enhancing properties that make it hard to trace.
- The cybercriminals said they had compromised "multiple devices," giving them access to the “most internal and secret conversations” of the president and his inner circle.
- Onlookers were given a choice: they could either donate monero to a wallet that prompted the hackers to "share the data" or another wallet asking them to keep it private.
- Trump's administration was accused without evidence of participating in the spread of COVID-19 and collaborating with “foreign actors manipulating the 2020 elections.”
- The New York Times also reported the website takeover and subsequent solicitation of crypto donations appeared to be a variation on the common crypto "giveaway" scam.
- Such scams ask people to send money to a particular address with the false promise of doubling or returning a victim's funds.
- Similar attacks hit major accounts on Twitter back in July, including that of former Vice President Joe Biden.
- The source of the attack is unclear, but an investigation is currently underway by U.S. law enforcement.
- The incident comes as the U.S. presidential election campaign between incumbent Trump and challenger Biden enters its last week.
- Biden is far ahead of Trump when it comes to donations, according to another NYT article.
See also: Election 2020: What’s at Stake for the Crypto Industry
More For You
‘The banks will not accept it’: Dimon escalates battle over stablecoin rewards in CLARITY Act debate

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon criticized Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and warned the current CLARITY Act framework could ultimately fail, as banks and crypto firms clash over whether stablecoin issuers should be allowed to offer yield-bearing rewards that resemble bank deposits.
What to know:
- JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon criticized Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and warned that the latest CLARITY Act draft could fail if lawmakers do not address banks’ concerns over stablecoin regulation on Friday.
- Dimon argued that the bill would let stablecoin issuers effectively pay interest on deposits without bank-style protections, predicting...
Top Stories











