Vulnerabilities to Crypto Currency Scams and Online Persuasion Strategies

Authors

  • Vilma Luoma-aho School of Business & Economics, University of Jyvaskyla
  • Johnny Botha CSIR
  • Miriam Hautala JSBE, JYU

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.34190/iccws.20.1.3254

Keywords:

Digital vulnerabilities, Misinformation, Persuasion tactics, Crypto currency, Scams

Abstract

As deepfakes and scams online become more common, many individuals, organizations and nation-states struggle to maintain trust and remain credible sources for their stakeholders. Increasingly algorithms shape the digital information landscape, choosing what content is displayed and deepening the individual silos of information seeking. Recently it has been suggested that the best efforts to combat misinformation are not to try to stop its spread but through understanding the vulnerabilities on which it lands in the individual receiving the false information. There is an urgent need to investigate the mechanisms and extent of deception in online environments, as little is known about these specific vulnerabilities that then cause individuals to become victims for online scams. In the digital environment, different vulnerabilities exist yet they result from siloed studies in specific contexts. This paper starts by categorizing the different levels on which digital communication may be vulnerable. Further, this research asks how these vulnerabilities are utilized and what persuasion tactics are at use when crypto scams are concerned. Building on the persuasion principles, this paper analyzes three recent highly successful online scams. The findings conclude that social proof and scarcity were most used influence mechanisms, suggesting that scam prevention needs to understanding the vulnerabilities on which these influence mechanisms build.

Author Biographies

Johnny Botha, CSIR

Johnny Botha is finalizing his PhD in Computer Science at the University of Western Cape on the Topic “A process for Blockchain Crime Investigations Based on Open-source Intelligence”. He is the Principal Researcher & Project Manager at the CSIR, holds a masters degree in Information Technology, at University of South Africa(UNISA), NDip and BTech degree in Computer Systems Engineering at the Tswane University of Technology(TUT). He has published on crypto currency scams and cyber security.

Miriam Hautala, JSBE, JYU

Miriam Hautala (M.Sc., Corporate Communication) is a doctoral student in the Jyväskylä School of Business and Economics. Hautala is interested in information warfare, strategic communication and cognitive security. In her doctoral dissertation, Hautala investigates strategic communication, focusing on its vulnerabilities and role in building resilience in society.

Downloads

Published

24-03-2025