Can Trust Wallet’s new poisoning protection stop the rise of address spoofing?
Published 3/12/2026, 2:42:30 AM
Trust Wallet’s new Address Poisoning Protection, launched on March 10, 2026, is a sophisticated mitigation tool designed to combat the "copy-paste" vulnerability of crypto transactions. While it provides a robust defense for individual users by flagging lookalike addresses in real-time, it is unlikely to "stop" the industry-wide rise of address spoofing due to scammer adaptation, platform-specific limitations, and the persistent risk of human error.
Technical Mechanics of the Protection
The feature integrates directly into the transaction flow of Trust Wallet’s mobile application, targeting the moment a user interacts with a destination address.
- Real-Time Intelligence Feeds: Rather than relying on static blocklists that scammers easily bypass by creating new addresses, the system uses an Intel Security API. This API aggregates live data from HashDit, Binance Security, and Trust Wallet’s internal monitoring tools [Source: BeInCrypto].
- Visual Verification: When a user pastes an address, the wallet performs a heuristic check for "lookalike" patterns (addresses that mimic the first and last few characters of a user's transaction history). It triggers a high-severity warning and displays a side-by-side comparison, highlighting the specific middle characters that differ [Source: CryptoRank].
- Multi-Chain Support: At launch, the protection covers 32 EVM-compatible chains, including Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, Base, and newer networks like Sonic and Abstract [Source: CryptoRank].
The Scale of the Address Spoofing Threat (2025–2026)
The rise of address spoofing is fueled by massive automation and AI-enabled tactics. The following data highlights the scale of the challenge Trust Wallet is attempting to address:
Limitations and Scammer Adaptation
Despite its technical merits, several factors prevent this feature from being a complete "stop" to address spoofing:
Conclusion
Trust Wallet’s new protection is a significant upgrade that addresses the "invisible" nature of poisoning attacks through real-time intelligence and visual character highlighting. It effectively closes the loop on the most common form of spoofing—copying from transaction history—but it remains a tool for mitigation in a continuing arms race where scammers are already pivoting toward AI-driven impersonation. Whether this stops the "rise" of spoofing depends on whether similar protections are adopted as a mandatory standard across the broader wallet ecosystem.