Bitget to combat $442B per year multi-asset fraud losses with annual Anti-Scam Month security campaign

- Bitget has launched Anti-Scam Month 2026, its annual global security initiative running throughout June.
- Interpol data reflects a sharp rise in fraud targeting digital asset users as multi-asset markets lost more than $442 billion in 2025.Ā
- Throughout June, Bitget will release a multi-part security article and video series, along with anti-scam reports focused on multi-asset trading and AI-related financial risks.
Bitget, the worldās largest Universal Exchange (UEX), has launched Anti-Scam Month 2026, its annual global security initiative running throughout June under the theme āMore Assets, Stronger Shield: Stay Safe in the Multi-Asset Era.ā
The initiative expands Bitgetās focus on user protection as digital finance enters a new phase where crypto, tokenized stocks, RWAs, AI-linked products, and broader multi-asset trading environments coexist within the same trading environment.
What is Bitgetās Anti-Scam Month?
According to Interpol, financial scams tied to multi-asset markets resulted in more than $442 billion in losses globally in 2025, reflecting a sharp rise in fraud targeting digital asset users.
As tokenized financial products continue entering mainstream trading environments, new vulnerabilities are emerging across crypto wallets, phishing systems, fake applications, AI-generated scams, and identity manipulation techniques built to target users operating across multiple asset classes.
Anti-Scam Month 2026 forms part of Bitgetās broader approach to user protection as the platform continues expanding access to crypto, tokenized stocks, commodities, forex, ETFs, and precious metals under its Universal Exchange model. The campaign is built around the idea that broader financial access must be matched by stronger awareness tools as trading behavior increasingly moves between traditional finance and crypto-native environments within the same platform.
āThe financial system is becoming increasingly interconnected as users move across crypto, tokenized assets, commodities, and traditional financial markets within the same trading cycle,ā said Gracy Chen, CEO at Bitget. āAs market access expands, scam tactics are evolving just as quickly. Security today requires more than platform infrastructure. It also highly depends on helping users better recognize risk as financial activity becomes more multi-asset by design.ā
Bitget touts expansion of platform security
Throughout June, Bitget will release a multi-part security article and video series covering common attack vectors, including SMS spoofing, fake applications, phishing systems, malicious smart contracts, and high-risk token schemes.
The content series will also examine emerging fraud patterns tied to artificial intelligence and tokenized real-world assets, two sectors increasingly attracting both institutional attention and scam activity as adoption accelerates.
The final phase of the campaign will include the release of anti-scam reports focused on multi-asset trading and AI-related financial risks, co-authored with onchain security agencies, real-world asset institutions, and AI industry partners.
Bitget will also host X Spaces bringing together security researchers, ecosystem contributors, and community participants for live discussions around emerging scam trends and risk mitigation strategies across digital finance.
The launch follows Bitgetās continued expansion of platform security measures, including proof of reserves, the Protection Fund, and wider user education initiatives designed to strengthen account safety and risk awareness. As digital assets increasingly intersect with traditional financial markets, platforms are facing growing expectations to combine broader market access with stronger safeguards for users navigating more complex financial environments.
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Hannah Collymore
Hannah is a writer and editor with nearly a decade of blog writing and event reporting experience in the crypto space. At Cryptopolitan, Hannah contributes to the news page, reporting and analyzing the latest developments in DeFi, RWA, crypto regulation, AI and frontier tech industries. She graduated from Arcadia university with a degree in Business Administration.
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