Facebook Mining Scam: $27,830 in Bitcoin Lost After Credential Compromise
BlockedPhysical coercion was applied — the custody structure did not protect against forced transfer.
A user new to Bitcoin was introduced to cryptocurrency via Facebook by an account claiming mining expertise. The contact offered to help the user purchase Bitcoin from a merchant and connect to a mining pool to generate profit. The user complied, purchasing Bitcoin and later providing their Blockchain.com username and password to the contact, believing this was necessary to activate mining access.
Over time, the user's wallet balance grew to approximately $10,000 in displayed value. However, when the user attempted to withdraw funds, they encountered repeated requests for a private key and demands to invest additional capital before withdrawal would be permitted. The scammer continued contact only long enough to solicit more investment. Eventually the user discovered that displayed profits were not reflected in actual portfolio balance — a classic sign of account compromise.
When the user challenged the contact about missing funds, the scammer ceased all communication. By the user's accounting, approximately $27,830 in profits had been promised but never materialized, and funds were systematically transferred out of the user's control. The user also noted separate addresses under observation showing approximately $800 in additional phantom gains. At the time of posting (approximately 2017–2018), the user was unemployed, without stable housing, and expressed severe psychological distress over the loss.
The scammer, identified as 'DESCOMM OSAS,' claimed to be Nigerian but represented himself as California-based.
| Stress condition | Coercion |
| Custody system | Exchange custody |
| Outcome | Blocked |
| Documentation | Partial |
| Year observed | 2018 |
What custody structure can and cannot protect against coercion
The relevant structural question is not whether a custody setup can prevent coercion — it typically cannot — but whether it can limit what an attacker can obtain through coercion. A setup where the holder has sole knowledge of all credentials, with no geographic distribution and no multisig threshold, gives an attacker everything they need by controlling one person. A setup where credentials are geographically distributed, where multisig requires coordination with parties in other locations, or where a passphrase-protected decoy wallet exists, limits what any single physical attack can yield.
Observed cases in this archive range from violent home invasions and kidnappings to subtler forms of coercion: legal threats, family pressure, business disputes that escalated. The outcomes depend on whether structural protections existed and whether they held under pressure. Setups with no geographic distribution or threshold requirements produced the worst outcomes.
The legal dimension adds complexity: transactions executed under coercion are technically valid. The blockchain cannot distinguish voluntary from involuntary signatures. Recovery after a coerced transfer depends entirely on legal processes — identifying the attacker, prosecuting, and attempting asset recovery — which is slow, expensive, and uncertain.
The most effective structural protection against coercion is geographic key distribution combined with a signing threshold that cannot be met from one location. An attacker who controls one person in one place cannot force a transaction that requires coordination with key holders in other jurisdictions. This protection requires accepting coordination overhead during normal use.
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