Abuse to Bitcoin address
143KjGtN1BNJ7iSnym3L3ZPohtoDLw2Kva

Sextortion

Abuser: Received: from [103.23.201.173] (helo=astro.cahaya.tv)

Country Indonesia City Jakarta, Jakarta Raya Sent a large jpg file, had to manually enter Bitcoin address.

United States flag United States, 2019-03-29 21:28:58

Sextortion

Abuser: Received: from[179.108.21.49] Brazil Itajuba, Minas Gerais

Received: from 177-124-77-243.fxnet.com.br ([177.124.77.243]:47178 helo=[177-124-72-168.citel.com.br]) by astro.cahaya.tv with esmtpsa (TLSv1:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:256)

United States flag United States, 2019-03-29 21:40:12

Ransomware

Abuser: [email protected]

Hi, this account is now hacked! Modify the pswd this time!

Finland flag Finland, 2019-03-30 12:28:09

Blackmail scam

Abuser: [email protected]

E-mail from my own address with a text (really a jpg) saying they had infected my computer (not true) and hacked my E-mail and facebook (also not true) and recorded me watching porno on my own webcamera (most definitely not true as I have no webcam here nor do I watch porno) and would publish it on Facebook (where they also claimed to have set a tracking pixel) and send to my relatives and to my bosses at work if I didn't pay Euro1000 to this bitcoin address.

United States flag United States, 2019-03-30 18:01:56

Sextortion

Abuser: 80.67.18.2, [email protected], email spoof

The e-mail demanded US$1,000, payable within two days. Claims in the e-mail are false (that it was sent from the recipient's e-mail address -> the message headers show it wasn't; that the sender has video from the recipient's webcam -> the recipient doesn't have a webcam), so these are idle threats and should be ignored. The e-mail body is a single graphics file with numerous typographical errors, so you won't be able to cut & paste the Bitcoin wallet ID as instructed. This is done intentionally, to evade spam filters.

Germany flag Germany, 2019-03-31 10:00:02

Sextortion

Abuser: 92.115.128.193

The e-mail demanded US$1,000, payable within two days. Claims in the e-mail are false (that it was sent from the recipient's e-mail address -> the message headers show it wasn't; that the sender has video from the recipient's webcam -> the recipient doesn't have a webcam), so these are idle threats and should be ignored. The e-mail body is a single graphics file with numerous typographical errors, so you won't be able to cut & paste the Bitcoin wallet ID as instructed. This is done intentionally, to evade spam filters. The message's originating IP address is typically an anonymous SOCKS proxy, so it doesn't reveal the author's actual identity.

New Zealand flag New Zealand, 2019-03-31 17:15:29

Blackmail scam

Abuser: [email protected]

Account hacked and all contacts will get images and porn site video etc etc Mail sent as image

Denmark flag Denmark, 2019-03-31 18:08:06

Blackmail scam

Abuser: no name

bitcoin sucks. no regulation and a world of thieves using it. Do these reports ever go anywhere?

United States flag United States, 2019-03-31 21:29:56

Blackmail scam

Abuser: RDP (Remote Control)

Stated they had video of me watching porn at a website. They said they would send the video to all of my contacts unless I send $1000 to their Bit-Coin account. What a scam.

United States flag United States, 2019-03-31 23:36:49

Ransomware

Abuser: No name

It says it's a hacker that hacked a corporative e-mail in a corporative notebook, saying that we visited a porn page and then they got to install a malware

Chile flag Chile, 2019-04-01 20:29:21

Sextortion

Abuser: SPAM mail

Email send containing a picture with extortion text and wallet number

Germany flag Germany, 2019-04-07 16:14:15

Blackmail scam

Abuser: spoofed address

Fake sextortion/blackmail for bitcoin

Canada flag Canada, 2019-04-08 10:49:38

Sextortion

Abuser: unknown

Fake sextortion/blackmail for bitcoin

Germany flag Germany, 2019-07-17 12:12:00