I just saw a very strong message from Hayden Adams, the founder of Uniswap, warning about the resurgence of scams impersonating his platform. And honestly, the situation is more concerning than many think.



What’s happening is that scammers are now buying ads on major search engines to appear when people search for "Uniswap." Result: a user clicks on what looks like the official site, connects their wallet... and that’s it, their funds are gone. A documented case shows someone losing a six-figure amount this way.

Hayden Adams has pointed out that fake applications appear while legitimate approvals in app stores are still pending. It’s a pattern that has persisted for years, which is frustrating considering how many reports have been made.

January’s numbers were brutal. According to CertiK, scams and exploits in crypto totaled approximately $370.3 million that month, the worst in 11 months. But here’s the interesting part: out of 40 reported incidents, most of those losses came from a single social engineering attack that drained around $284 million from one victim. That shows how sophisticated these attacks have become.

It’s not new that Uniswap faces impersonation. In October 2024, there were already cloned sites with altered interfaces, misleading "connect" buttons instead of "start," and "bridge" options instead of access to documentation. What has changed is the scale and sophistication.

The real risk is that the gap between a legitimate site and a fake one has collapsed. When you see a search result that looks official, even cautious users can end up granting permissions that unlock full access to their wallets. Hayden Adams is right to raise awareness about this.

The industry needs more aggressive moves: stricter domain validation, explicit warnings in search results, and safer wallet approval flows. Search engines and app stores need to speed up the removal of fake content.

For us as users, the harsh lesson is: brand integrity is a line of defense as much as any technical safeguard. Verify domains, distrust paid search results, and when connecting wallets, do so only from URLs you’ve verified directly. The Uniswap case is a reminder that even established brands are under constant fire.
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