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I still remember when Amouranth, the streamer known worldwide in crypto circles, shared that terrifying post on X. It was March 2024 when her Houston home was invaded by armed robbers who explicitly demanded bitcoin. This isn’t one of those horror stories from the web; unfortunately, it really happened.
What strikes me most is how Amouranth handled the moment. Instead of calling the police, she tweeted directly from the scene. Her logic? With a gun pointed at her head, making a phone call could have been deadly. So she chose to warn the online world about what was happening. She described how the criminals dragged her out of bed, shouting that they wanted crypto, as if they knew exactly what to look for.
Here’s the interesting part. A few months earlier, Amouranth had posted a screenshot of a Coinbase wallet with over 20 million in bitcoin and ethereum, publicly asking whether to sell or hold. That visibility probably put her in the crosshairs. In the crypto security world, exposing your digital wealth has become almost an invitation to criminals.
Industry experts, like Jameson Lopp from Casa, have noticed a worrying trend. Crypto thefts are increasing not by chance, but because the value of bitcoin keeps rising and criminals are becoming more aware of where to find real wealth. Today, BTC trades around 70.96K with a 2.82% drop in the last 24 hours, but the total accumulated value remains enormous.
What makes crypto theft different from traditional financial crimes is speed. There are no intermediaries, nothing to block, nothing to recover. Once funds are transferred, they’re gone. Amouranth wasn’t the only high-profile person to suffer this. Even Ledger’s CEO has been targeted by similar attacks.
The lesson? In 2024 and beyond, physical security has become part of crypto security. Protecting private keys isn’t enough; you have to protect yourself. And maybe, next time someone with millions in crypto considers sharing their wallet details publicly, they should think twice.