👀 家人们,每天看行情、刷大佬观点,却从来不开口说两句?你的观点可能比你想的更有价值!
广场新人 & 回归福利正式上线!不管你是第一次发帖还是久违回归,我们都直接送你奖励!🎁
每月 $20,000 奖金等你来领!
📅 活动时间: 长期有效(月底结算)
💎 参与方式:
用户需为首次发帖的新用户或一个月未发帖的回归用户。
发帖时必须带上话题标签: #我在广场发首帖 。
内容不限:币圈新闻、行情分析、晒单吐槽、币种推荐皆可。
💰 奖励机制:
必得奖:发帖体验券
每位有效发帖用户都可获得 $50 仓位体验券。(注:每月奖池上限 $20,000,先到先得!如果大家太热情,我们会继续加码!)
进阶奖:发帖双王争霸
月度发帖王: 当月发帖数量最多的用户,额外奖励 50U。
月度互动王: 当月帖子互动量(点赞+评论+转发+分享)最高的用户,额外奖励 50U。
📝 发帖要求:
帖子字数需 大于30字,拒绝纯表情或无意义字符。
内容需积极健康,符合社区规范,严禁广告引流及违规内容。
💡 你的观点可能会启发无数人,你的第一次分享也许就是成为“广场大V”的起点,现在就开始广场创作之旅吧!
Chinese Police Warn of a Rise in Digital Yuan-themed Scams
Per the state-run news outlet CCTV (via Xinhua), officers in Shandong Province claimed they had seen a rise in digital yuan-themed “fraud.”
They said one recent scam had ensnared “tens of thousands of people.”
Officers said that “some criminal suspects” have “seen opportunities” to strike amid e-CNY adoption drives.
Police said that many fraudsters had developed authentic-looking apps that make use of digital yuan logos downloaded from official sites.
They then use these to dupe citizens into thinking they can make easy “investment” money by downloading these apps and sending funds to what they think are legitimate financial firms.
These firms inevitably turn out to be private accounts.
Many of these accounts turn out to be overseas-based, officers warned.
And that makes recovering victims’ funds difficult for Chinese authorities, police added.
The Shandong police explained scammers were infiltrating public group chats with offers of “digital yuan credit lines” that could be used to purchase goods on e-commerce platforms such as Taobao and JD.com.
Chinese Police: Digital Yuan-themed Scams Becoming More Commonplace
The media outlet quoted a victim surnamed Zhang as explaining that scammers had persuaded him to pay an initial “registration fee” of just under $40.
In return, he was told that he would soon receive a credit line worth thousands of USD.
And he was told that he could increase this further by “recruiting new members,” which he dutifully did.
He said:
Zhang added:
Police said they had identified an app named Digital Credit (literal translation).
They said the app was “counterfeit.”
And officers said it had been “illegally developed by scammers overseas.”
The scammers, police said, used “forged PBoC documents and real digital yuan logos to confuse the public.”
Last week, Chinese charitable institutions stated they had begun to accept digital yuan donations from both corporate entities and private individuals.