Scam Detective
Domain

digitalcoin.co

First seen Feb 23, 2026

Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • WHOIS registration hidden
  • 17 community reports from users

Campaign Intelligence

This cluster centers on 2382 connected domains tagged as PureHVNC, elf, sh. 572 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (8772427372, 1319641540, 1319641221) with 557 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2228 complaints with federal agencies. Geog...

This cluster centers on 2396 connected domains tagged as 156-233-71-230, Quakbot, lnk. 586 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (8772427372, 1319641540, 1319641221) with 565 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2237 complaints with federal agen...

This cluster centers on 1895 connected domains tagged as BeaverTail, RedLineStealer, password: 2026. 113 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 934 phone numbers (8772427372, 1319641540, 1319641221) with 524 FTC complaints; 683 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2093 complaints wit...

This cluster centers on 2416 connected domains tagged as BABADEDA, WallStealer, meterpreter. 607 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (5086371451, 9366439335, 1842506726) with 570 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2243 complaints with federa...

This cluster centers on 2764 connected domains tagged as BeaverTail, Kaiji, fbf543. 645 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1132 phone numbers (7638857447, 8664372914, 2157987305) with 10266 FTC complaints; 146 companies (JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., Advanced Resolution Services Inc., EVERBANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8616274 CFPB complaints; 298 email addresses (xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@vm...

This cluster centers on 3287 connected domains tagged as HijackLoader, RemcosRAT, screenconnect. 617 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1649 phone numbers (5408463620, 8552597377, 8007873903) with 7110 FTC complaints; 143 companies (Informative LLC, HomePlus Corporation, Doral Capital Corporation) with 8547081 CFPB complaints; 807 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@...

This cluster centers on 2874 connected domains tagged as QuasarRAT, StealitStealer, pw-k53mv9bc. 652 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1375 phone numbers (2157987305, 2025069230, 2028641298) with 14635 FTC complaints; 160 companies (JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., Advanced Resolution Services Inc., EVERBANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8680419 CFPB complaints; 299 email addresses (abuse@fb.com, ...

This cluster centers on 1486 connected domains tagged as None, keylogger. 5 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1364 phone numbers (3124141737, 3163966869, 8553892999) with 17909 FTC complaints; 170 companies (EQUIFAX, INC., TRANSUNION INTERMEDIATE HOLDINGS, INC., BANK OF AMERICA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8747332 CFPB complaints; 187 email addresses (xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@vmh5.grup...

Details

Registrar
NAMECHEAP INC
Registration Date
5/19/2013
First Seen
2/23/2026

Related Domains

Community Reports

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

Why mine Quark (QRK)? Securecoin (SRC) has the same features ...excepted it is still largely unmined. I know some economist backed Quark recently, and there has been talk about him being bought by QRK devs, but in the end I don't think any of this really matters... As can be seen on the other sub-reddits, many people are getting into mining, following the recent Bitcoin buzz. Some are looking for ASIC sellers, some have bought GPUs, and I suspect quite a few just use their CPUs to mine QRK (or just wish they could still use their CPUs to mine Bitcoin, if they have not heard about QRK). When the people in the last category start to realize [Securecoin](https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=270852.0) has the same specifications as QRK excepted that it follows the minting curve of Bitcoin, I think they will go for it. After all, it's the best opportunity for people who get into crypto-currencies now to get on a Bitcoin-like ship before it sails, and with no hardware investment at all. It was launched about 3 months ago, that's nothing in the Bitcoin timescale: less than 5% of the coins have been mined, and each block is rewarded with full subsidies. In contrast, 98% of QRK are already gone. I think it can be successful if it builds on both the Bitcoin and Quark hypes. Moreover it will probably stay around as an ASIC-resistant coin for some time, as it is not expensive enough to motivate research into ASICs, and the fact that it uses 6 different hashing algorithms must make it about 6 times as expensive to produce ASICs. So it will be a perfect opportunity for anyone who has heard about Bitcoin to try mining, with a clean slate for everybody. And let's face it, mining is fun. The people who start mining will probably stick around to support they crypto-currency. It is an excellent moment for a CPU coin to try and build a large user base. If some of you are fed up with the newcomers' questions about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining, I invite you to try a little social

4498 days ago13 upvotes

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