The alert is a warning about a widespread crypto security risk (address poisoning and social engineering) targeting safe wallet users, not a direct exploit of the shiba inu protocol or its smart contracts. while serious, it's a general industry threat the shib team is proactively addressing by warning its community, which can be seen as a positive for transparency.
The security notice comes directly from a shiba inu team member (lucie) and safe labs, the developers of safe wallet. this is an official and verifiable source.
While any security alert can introduce a degree of caution, the proactive nature of the shib team in warning users and clarifying that it's not a protocol exploit may mitigate negative sentiment. the risk is a general crypto threat, not specific to shib's infrastructure, thus unlikely to cause a significant price movement.
The immediate effect will be increased vigilance among shib holders and safe wallet users. any price reaction, if any, would likely be temporary as the market processes the information and understands it's a general security advisory rather than a shib-specific vulnerability.
Cover image via U.Today Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by our writers are their own and do not represent the views of U.Today. The financial and market information provided on U.Today is intended for informational purposes only. U.Today is not liable for any financial losses incurred while trading cryptocurrencies. Conduct your own research by contacting financial experts before making any investment decisions. We believe that all content is accurate as of the date of publication, but certain offers mentioned may no longer be available. Read U.TODAY on Google News In a recent tweet, Shiba Inu team member Lucie shared a security notice for the SHIB community. Attackers have created thousands of lookalike wallet addresses intended to trick Safe Wallet users into sending funds to the wrong destination. Advertisement Lucie noted that this was not a protocol exploit, infrastructure breach, smart contract vulnerability nor a system compromise. π¨ Security notice for multisig users A coordinated address poisoning and social engineering campaign is targeting Safe wallets. Attackers created thousands of lookalike wallet addresses designed to trick users into sending funds to the wrong destination. This was not aβ¦ pic.twitter.com/UjgKwKrjGY β πππππ (@LucieSHIB) February 6, 2026 While 5,000 malicious addresses have been identified, flagged and are being removed from the Safe Wallet interface to reduce accidental interaction, Lucie urges the Shiba Inu community to take necessary precautions as such schemes are easy to replicate. Advertisement Such precautions include always confirming the full address or recipients outside the platform, using an address book or allow list and sending a small test transaction first. This might be essential, especially for high-value transfers. HOT Stories Crypto Market Review: $500,000,000 in XRP Buying Volume, Shiba Inu (SHIB) Surprisingly Bullish, Will Bitcoin (BTC) Be Saved Before $50,000? Bitcoin (BTC): Fidelity Identifies $65K as 'Attractive Entry Point' What happened? On Feb. 6, Safe Labs shared a security update with the crypto community, noting a large-scale address poisoning and social engineering campaign targeting multisig users. A total of 5,000 addresses have been flagged as malicious via SafeShield (powered by its security partners) and are being removed from Safe Walletβs UI, reducing the risk of accidental interaction. Advertisement You Might Also Like Wed, 10/22/2025 - 15:56 Crucial Security Alert Issued to Shiba Inu (SHIB) Community By Godfrey Benjamin Address poisoning and social engineering, like phishing, are becoming a growing threat in the crypto market. In a recent incident, a crypto user lost $50 million due to a copy-paste address mistake. Before transferring 50 million USDT, the victim had sent 50 USDT as a test to his own address. The scammer immediately spoofed a wallet with the same first and last four characters and performed an address poisoning attack. Since many wallets hide the middle part of the address with "..." to make the UI look better, many users often copy the address from transaction histories and usually only check the starting and ending letters. This error caused the user to send the remaining 49,999,950 USDT to the fake address copied from his transaction history. The lesson in this incident is that of precaution, to always double-check addresses before making a transfer and never to copy addresses from transaction history for convenience. #Shiba Inu (SHIB) News #Shiba Inu