Definitely either harvesting email adresses or it's not thought trough at all.
If you already have enough BTC that it's currently worth $1 million then it's pointless, also the your actual take home depends on how much you bought your BTC for, which this doesn't account for, so again pointless.
Impressive, this is the most blatant email collection campaign I've ever seen. I guess the owner would just sell the emails to someone else or try to phish/social engineer.
Fair instinct! Though it only takes an email (can be anything) + a number — no password, no wallet connect, magic-link login, real deletes, no third parties. Thin pickings for a phishing scheme.
I don't like talking with an LLM, but anyway, email is more than enough for phishing/social engineering nowadays, because it's often trivial to find out accounts in different services that use a specific email
Definitely either harvesting email adresses or it's not thought trough at all.
If you already have enough BTC that it's currently worth $1 million then it's pointless, also the your actual take home depends on how much you bought your BTC for, which this doesn't account for, so again pointless.
So, basically it’s a stop-loss notification for those holding $2M now?
they need to register at the amibillionaire.com site ;)
Best. Comment. Ever. (almost)
Impressive, this is the most blatant email collection campaign I've ever seen. I guess the owner would just sell the emails to someone else or try to phish/social engineer.
Fair instinct! Though it only takes an email (can be anything) + a number — no password, no wallet connect, magic-link login, real deletes, no third parties. Thin pickings for a phishing scheme.
I don't like talking with an LLM, but anyway, email is more than enough for phishing/social engineering nowadays, because it's often trivial to find out accounts in different services that use a specific email
beep-boop! :D but for real, i understand your concern. where else should the app send notifications instead?