Bitget Kicks Off Anti-Scam Month 2026 To Strengthen Security Across Multi-Asset Trading Ecosystem
In Brief
Bitget launches Anti-Scam Month 2026 to boost security across multi-asset trading, addressing rising fraud risks in crypto, tokenized assets and AI scams amid $442B global losses.

Bitget, described as the world’s largest Universal Exchange (UEX), has launched Anti-Scam Month 2026, an annual global security initiative running throughout June under the theme “More Assets, Stronger Shield: Stay Safe in the Multi-Asset Era.”
The campaign is positioned as an expansion of Bitget’s user protection efforts at a time when digital finance is increasingly shaped by the convergence of crypto assets, tokenized equities, real-world assets (RWAs), AI-linked instruments, and broader multi-asset trading environments operating within unified platforms.
Interpol data cited by the exchange indicates that financial scams linked to multi-asset markets caused more than $442 billion in global losses in 2025, highlighting a significant rise in fraud targeting users of digital financial systems. As tokenized financial instruments become more widely integrated into mainstream trading ecosystems, new security risks are emerging, including phishing schemes, fraudulent applications, compromised crypto wallets, AI-generated scam content, and identity manipulation techniques designed to exploit users operating across multiple asset classes.
Rising Complexity in Multi-Asset Financial Security Challenges
Anti-Scam Month 2026 is presented as part of Bitget’s wider security framework as the platform continues to expand access to crypto, tokenized stocks, commodities, foreign exchange, exchange-traded funds, and precious metals under its Universal Exchange model. The initiative is based on the premise that increased financial access requires stronger user awareness and protection tools, particularly as trading activity increasingly spans both traditional financial markets and crypto-native systems within the same environment.
“The financial system is becoming increasingly interconnected as users move across crypto, tokenized assets, commodities, and traditional financial markets within the same trading cycle,” said Gracy Chen, CEO at Bitget in a written statement. “As 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,” she added.
During June, Bitget is scheduled to publish a multi-part series of educational articles and videos addressing common fraud techniques, including SMS spoofing, counterfeit applications, phishing operations, malicious smart contracts, and high-risk token schemes. The content will also examine emerging scam patterns associated with artificial intelligence and tokenized real-world assets, both of which are attracting growing institutional interest alongside increased fraudulent activity. The final stage of the campaign will include the release of anti-scam reports focused on multi-asset trading environments and AI-related financial risks, developed in collaboration with on-chain security agencies, real-world asset institutions, and AI sector partners. In addition, Bitget will host X Spaces discussions featuring security researchers, ecosystem participants, and community members to analyse evolving scam trends and risk mitigation approaches across digital finance.
The initiative follows the continued expansion of Bitget’s security infrastructure, including proof-of-reserves reporting, a Protection Fund, and broader educational efforts aimed at improving user awareness and account safety. As digital assets become more closely integrated with traditional financial systems, trading platforms are increasingly expected to balance expanded market access with enhanced safeguards for users navigating more complex and interconnected financial environments.
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About The Author
Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.
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Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.



