SyntaxVerse has put its planned BingX listing on hold after alleging that a scammer exploited BingX’s own verification process during exchange-listing talks. The project’s public update claim
SyntaxVerse has put its planned BingX listing on hold after alleging that a scammer exploited BingX’s own verification process during exchange-listing talks.
The project’s public update claims the team was contacted on Telegram by a person presenting themselves as a BingX listing agent. SyntaxVerse says the contact passed two checks before any payment was made: a username check through BingX Verify and an email confirmation from BingX corporate mail domains that also passed the exchange’s verification tool.
That is what makes the dispute sharper than a normal fake-agent scam. BingX’s own Listing FastTrack page tells projects to beware of impersonators and verify contacts through BingX Verify. Its support materials also direct users to BingX Verify when checking whether a person is an official representative. SyntaxVerse’s allegation is that the official verification layer itself validated the wrong contact.
Listing Talks Break Down After Second Payment Demand
SyntaxVerse says it made an upfront deposit after those checks cleared. The next day, the alleged agent requested a second payment, which the project treated as abnormal. After SyntaxVerse challenged the request, the Telegram contact allegedly blocked the team and deleted the group chat history.
The project later contacted BingX through corporate channels and says the explanation it received was that the Telegram usernames had been taken over by a scammer after the real owner’s account was deleted, while the verification records had not been updated. SyntaxVerse argues that this made BingX responsible for the failure because the exchange’s own database allegedly marked a compromised or outdated contact as official.
BingX had not issued a public response to the SyntaxVerse claims at publication time. That leaves the case in dispute, but the operational risk is clear: if a project uses the exact verification route an exchange recommends and still reaches a fraudulent counterparty, the weakness is no longer only user caution. It becomes a trust problem around the exchange’s verification data.
Exchange Listing Scams Keep Targeting Projects
Fake listing agents are a recurring crypto threat because early-stage projects often need exchange access, market makers, launch timing and liquidity support. Scammers exploit that pressure by copying real staff names, using Telegram groups, sending polished emails and pushing “urgent” deposit demands before teams can slow the process down.
The SyntaxVerse dispute fits the wider pattern behind crypto impersonation scams, where fake authority and believable proof can be more dangerous than obvious phishing. It also overlaps with broader social engineering risk in crypto, where the attacker does not need to break a blockchain if the victim can be led into trusting the wrong person.
For projects, the case adds a harsher checklist. Verification portals, emails and official-looking Telegram accounts are not enough when money is involved. Any listing deposit should require a signed agreement, named legal entity, invoice trail, direct confirmation through a ticketed exchange channel and ideally a video or account-manager verification path that cannot be erased with a deleted chat.
SyntaxVerse’s listing is now paused while it pursues a resolution. The broader warning is already visible: exchange-listing security depends not only on spotting fake agents, but on whether exchanges keep their own verification systems clean enough for projects to trust.
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