On 2026-05-15 13:27:48 UTC PhishDestroy delivered an evidence-backed abuse report
to abuse@whiteprivacy.com with VirusTotal detections, urlscan capture, legal violations, and full screenshot evidence.
More than 22 days later, the phishing infrastructure remains reachable
.
Under ICANN RAA §3.18 accredited registrars are contractually obliged to “take reasonable and prompt steps to investigate and respond appropriately to any reports of abuse.” Silence beyond 24 hours after a documented notification with verifiable evidence is not a timing issue — it is a policy decision to let the operation continue. PhishDestroy\'s position: where a registrar fails to act on clear evidence, the registrar has aligned itself with the operator of the scheme and bears co-responsibility for downstream harm caused to victims from the moment of notification onward.
alphabonds[.]org
Domain Security & Threat Intelligence Report“Home | Alpha Bonds”
This domain was flagged with zero detections out of 95 engines on VirusTotal as of latest scan, indicating minimal signature-based detection coverage. It resolves to IP 163.61.188.7, registered through TuringSign Inc. d/b/a Cosmotown on August 20, 2025 — a mere days-old entity with no operational history in financial services. The Let's Encrypt SSL certificate offers no protection against phishing, as it validates domain ownership only. There are currently no active entries on major blocklists (e.g., PhishTank, OpenPhish, Google Safe Browsing), which is typical for newly deployed phishing domains awaiting reporting. Registrar Cosmotown has a neutral trust score but is frequently used for domain privacy masking in fraudulent campaigns. The combination of zero AV detection, fresh registration, and no reputation makes this a high-risk convergence point.
Victims are lured via social media ads, email spam, and search engine poisoning targeting users searching for “high-yield bonds”, “corporate bond investments”, or “safe bond platforms”. The site mimics interfaces of regulated brokers (e.g., layout, disclaimers, fake testimonials), but requires users to upload ID, bank statements, and credit card details during “account setup”. Once credentials are captured, funds are drained via immediate unauthorized wire transfers. To mitigate exposure, users should avoid clicking ads for financial services and verify brokers via official regulators (FCA, SEC, ASIC). If you’ve engaged with alphabonds[.]org, cease all communication, revoke payment authorizations, and report the domain to your bank and to PhishDestroy under seed 32d06b for further analysis.
Security Signals
Threat Response Pipeline
Public Blocklist Status
Evidence Capture
Domain Intelligence
Technical detailsDNS, SSL SANs, timestamps
Threat Intel Cross-Reference · external sources
- · PhishDestroy — Active Phishing & Crypto Scam Domains by phishdestroy
Technologies · 13 identified
Bootstrap is a free and open-source CSS framework directed at responsive, mobile-first front-end web development. It contains CSS and JavaScript-based design templates for typography, forms, buttons, navigation, and other interface components.
getbootstrap.com 100% confidenceCloudflare is a web-infrastructure and website-security company, providing content-delivery-network services, DDoS mitigation, Internet security, and distributed domain-name-server services.
www.cloudflare.com 100% confidenceSweetAlert is a JavaScript library that provides alternative alert and modal dialog boxes for web applications, with customisable features, aiming to improve the user interface of the default browser dialogs.
sweetalert.js.org 100% confidenceSmartsupp is a live chat tool that offers visitor recording feature.
www.smartsupp.com 100% confidenceOWL Carousel is an enabled jQuery plugin that lets you create responsive carousel sliders.
owlcarousel2.github.io 100% confidenceLightbox is small javascript library used to overlay images on top of the current page.
lokeshdhakar.com 100% confidenceJSDelivr is a free public CDN for open-source projects. It can serve web files directly from the npm registry and GitHub repositories without any configuration.
www.jsdelivr.com 100% confidencejQuery is a JavaScript library which is a free, open-source software designed to simplify HTML DOM tree traversal and manipulation, as well as event handling, CSS animation, and Ajax.
jquery.com 100% confidenceGoogle Hosted Libraries is a stable, reliable, high-speed, globally available content distribution network for the most popular, open-source JavaScript libraries.
developers.google.com 100% confidenceHTTP/3 is the third major version of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol used to exchange information on the World Wide Web.
httpwg.org 100% confidenceVirusTotal Analysis
Site Performance Analysis
Google PageSpeed Insights — mobile performance audit of alphabonds.org · checked May 15, 2026
Evidence & External Reports
Were You Affected by This Site?
If you have interacted with this domain, entered personal information, or connected a cryptocurrency wallet — take immediate action. Below are resources to help you report the incident and protect yourself.
Report to Your Local Authorities
Select your country to get official cybercrime contacts, or generate an AI-powered complaint →
Related Domain Reports
Other Domains on 163.61.188.7 6 phishing domains
This IP hosts multiple phishing domains — infrastructure shared across campaigns
More Domains at TuringSign 6 flagged
About This Report: alphabonds.org
This domain security report for alphabonds.org is maintained by PhishDestroy's automated threat intelligence pipeline. Our system continuously monitors this domain across 95 security vendors on VirusTotal, 1 public blocklists.
The site displays a page titled “Home | Alpha Bonds”.
alphabonds.org has been flagged by 1 security vendor as of June 7, 2026.
If you believe this listing is inaccurate, you can submit an appeal. For more information about our methodology, visit our FAQ page.
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Recommendations & Advice for Victims
An estimated $51 billion flowed to illicit crypto wallets in 2024 (source). If you interacted with alphabonds.org — act now.
What should I do immediately?
Urgent
- Revoke token approvals — use revoke.cash to remove access granted to malicious smart contracts
- Move remaining funds to a brand-new wallet. The compromised wallet is no longer safe
- Change all passwords — email, exchange accounts, anything that shares the same password
- Enable 2FA using an authenticator app (not SMS). Disable SMS-based recovery
- Freeze cards if you entered banking details on the phishing site
What information should I collect for my report?
FBI guidelines
According to the FBI, the most important details are transaction data:
- Cryptocurrency addresses — scammer's wallet (e.g.,
0x5856...35985) - Amount & crypto type — exact amount (e.g., 1.02345 ETH, 0.5 BTC, 500 USDT)
- Transaction ID (hash) — the unique blockchain transaction identifier
- Exact dates & times — of each transaction and first contact with scammer
- Screenshots — scam website, chat messages, emails, wallet transactions, social media
- All URLs & domains used by the scammer (including
alphabonds.org) - Communications — emails, texts, phone numbers, usernames the scammer used
Even if you don't have all details — file a report anyway. Partial information still helps investigations.
Where should I report the scam?
- FBI IC3 — Internet Crime Complaint Center (US federal reporting)
- Europol — European cybercrime reporting (EU)
- Chainabuse — flag scam wallets across exchanges & platforms
- Your crypto exchange — contact Coinbase/Binance/Kraken support to freeze scammer's address
- Local police — creates an official record, even if they can't act immediately
The FBI recovered over $1 billion in crypto fraud in 2024 thanks to victim reports. Your report matters.
How do crypto scams typically work?
- Fake websites — pixel-perfect clones of legitimate sites with slightly altered domains
- Malicious approvals — "connect wallet" prompts that grant unlimited token spending to attackers
- Pig butchering — trust built over weeks via Telegram/WhatsApp/dating apps, then money stolen
- Recovery scams — victims targeted AGAIN by fake "recovery agents" demanding upfront fees. Always a scam
- Fake ads & airdrops — Google/social media ads and "free token" offers leading to wallet drainers
- AI-powered scams — deepfakes, automated phishing, and AI-generated sites making fraud harder to detect
How can I protect myself in the future?
- Use a hardware wallet (Ledger, Trezor). Never store large amounts in browser wallets
- Bookmark official sites — never click links from emails, DMs, or ads
- Read every approval — verify permissions before signing. Reject unlimited approvals
- Verify domains — check on PhishDestroy before interacting. Check HTTPS, spelling, domain age
- "Too good to be true" = scam — guaranteed returns, celebrity endorsements, urgent deadlines
How big is the crypto scam problem?
- $51 billion flowed to illicit crypto wallets in 2024 — CoinLedger
- Pig butchering losses grew 40% year over year, now the fastest-growing fraud type
- Only ~5% of victims report — your report helps shut down criminal networks
- FBI recovered $1B+ in 2024 thanks to victim reports — FBI.gov
Sources: FBI · CoinLedger · WorldMetrics



