May 15, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
SEC Is Probing Coinbase Over User Number Misstatement Concern Eric Trump Says He Got Into Crypto Amid Political Attack, Calls Bitcoin ‘Digital Gold’ Litecoin’s ETF Hopes Rise Even as Price Retreats From $101 Peak Ethereum Meant To Be Alternative, Not Rival to Bitcoin: ETH Co-Founder Anthony Di Iorio Kevin O’Leary: ‘I Want More Regulation, And I Want It Now’ Crypto Exchange CEO’s Daughter, Grandson Targeted in Paris Kidnap Attempt Uniswap (UNI) Falls 6% as Institutions Offload $82M, Still Up 20% in a Month U.S. Senate’s Stablecoin Push Still Alive as Bill May Return to Floor: Sources Smokey The Bera to Make Berachain More Resilient to Crypto Volatility 0x Acquires Competitor Flood in Push to Boost Share of $2.3B DEX Aggregator Market

Telegram Shuts Down ‘Largest Illicit Online Marketplace’ After Elliptic’s Insights

Telegram has shut down the illicit marketplace Haowang Guarantee, formerly Huione Guarantee, which has facilitated transactions totaling over $27 billion in stablecoins since 2021.

Haowang was shut down based on insights provided by blockchain analytics firm Elliptic on Tuesday.

The closure took place amidst a crackdown on thousands of suspected Chinese crypto-crime channels operating on Telegram, following Elliptic’s report into marketplace Xinbi Guarantee.

Telegram has now shut down both Huione and Xinbi, which processed a combined $35 billion of illicit transactions in stablecoins, Elliptic wrote in a web post on Wednesday.

“Our analysis indicates that Huione Guarantee has facilitated transactions totalling more than $27 billion since launching in 2021, making it the largest illicit online marketplace to have ever operated,” Elliptic wrote.

Xinbi was the second largest, having processed transactions worth $8.4 billion since 2022, Elliptic added.

For perspective, notable “dark web” marketplaces such as the Silk Road and Alphabay processed $216 million and $639 million respectively.

Such marketplaces historically operated through anonymous browser Tor, but have more recently shifted their operations to Telegram, the messaging app with over a billion users.

Huione and Xinbi are referred to as “guarantee” marketplaces, a term designated for platforms that do not sell goods and services themselves, but provide a venue for merchants to sell to customers.

Read More: 1 in 5 Cross-Chain Crypto Investigations Involve More Than 10 Blockchains, Elliptic Finds

This post was originally published on this site