Mkt Cap$2.27T+0.21%
24h Vol$65.54B
BTC Dom56.4%
ETH Dom8.9%
F&G13Extreme Fear
BTC$63,844.00+0.31% ETH$1,674.64+0.03% USDT$0.9994+0.07% BNB$605.05+0.05% USDC$0.9998+0.03% XRP$1.14+0.27% SOL$67.49+1.11% TRX$0.3164+1.33% FIGR_HELOC$1.03+0.07% DOGE$0.0874+0.97% HYPE$58.20-1.22% USDS$0.9997+0.00% LEO$9.62+1.28% RAIN$0.013-1.19% ZEC$412.23-5.62% XLM$0.1907-1.62% BTC$63,844.00+0.31% ETH$1,674.64+0.03% USDT$0.9994+0.07% BNB$605.05+0.05% USDC$0.9998+0.03% XRP$1.14+0.27% SOL$67.49+1.11% TRX$0.3164+1.33% FIGR_HELOC$1.03+0.07% DOGE$0.0874+0.97% HYPE$58.20-1.22% USDS$0.9997+0.00% LEO$9.62+1.28% RAIN$0.013-1.19% ZEC$412.23-5.62% XLM$0.1907-1.62%
ETH+0.03% Crypto

Over 500 Scam Tokens Deployed on Coinbase’s Base: Report

Over 500 scam tokens were deployed on Coinbase's Base blockchain between mid-July and its public debut earlier this month.

Over 500 Scam Tokens Deployed on Coinbase’s Base: Report
Image courtesy of 123rf.
Editorial disclosureRead more

All reviews, research, news and assessments of any kind on The Tokenist are compiled using a strict editorial review process by our editorial team. Neither our writers nor our editors receive direct compensation of any kind to publish information on tokenist.com. Our company, Tokenist Media LLC, is community supported and may receive a small commission when you purchase products or services through links on our website. Click here for a full list of our partners and an in-depth explanation on how we get paid.

Neither the author, Ruholamin Haqshanas, nor this website, The Tokenist, provide financial advice. Please consult our website policy prior to making financial decisions.

Base, a layer-2 blockchain that debuted earlier this month, has seen over 500 scam tokens since mid-July. According to on-chain data, more than half of these tokens let deployers mint an unlimited number of coins, causing significant price fluctuations. 

Scam Tokens Accounted For $3.7M in Trading Volume on Base

Developers launched over five hundred scam tokens on Coinbase’s newly launched Base blockchain from mid-July to its public debut in August. According to crypto trade surveillance platform Solidus Labs, roughly 300 of these tokens allow creators to mint an unlimited number of coins, significantly affecting their prices. Solidus added that 60 coins blocked users from reselling them on exchanges.

As a result, the scam tokens accounted for around $3.7 million in trading volume on Base-based decentralized exchanges, which enable users to make direct trades with each other. The scammers secured about $2 million in profit, per Solidus’s calculations. 

“Scam token creators feed on hype, promise, and price and volume manipulation.”

– Solidus said in a report.

The decentralized crypto solutions let anyone deploy a token, though detecting suspicious activity may be easier than in traditional finance, Solidus co-founder Chen Arad told Bloomberg. “Buzz is always a factor and naturally Base generated buzz which attracts scammers,” Arad added.

Join our Telegram group and never miss a breaking digital asset story.

The BALD Token Fiasco

Apart from hundreds of scam tokens, a mix of other “deceptively touted and traded” cryptocurrencies are also deployed on Optimism-powered Base, Solidus noted. At the start of August, a deployer launched the BALD meme coin, raking in $5.2 million in profits after hyping the token on social media and inflating its price on LeetSwap, a decentralized exchange on Base.

The move was initially labeled as a rug pull – a sudden cryptocurrency scam where the creators of a project or token disappear with investors’ funds, causing a rapid and significant loss in value. Interestingly, the rug pull was linked to FTX and Alameda Research founder Sam Bankman-Fried, but those claims are yet to be proven. 

Meanwhile, on Sunday, the anonymous BALD deployer later transferred around $12 million in Ether (ETH) back to the Ethereum network. The deployer then deposited $3.87 million of ETH to the crypto exchange Kraken, marking the first time more funds were transferred out of the Base network than bridged in. 

<strong>Finance is changing.</strong>
Learn how, with Five Minute Finance.
A weekly newsletter that covers the big trends in FinTech and Decentralized Finance.

Have you used Coinbase’s layer-2 network? Let us know in the comments below.  

Tim Fries

Tim Fries

Author · Tokenist

Tim Fries is the cofounder of The Tokenist. He has a B. Sc. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Michigan, and an MBA from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Tim served as a Senior Associate on the investment team at RW Baird's US Private Equity division, and is also the co-founder of Protective Technologies Capital, an investment firm specializing in sensing, protection and control solutions.

Related Stories