Telegram struck a devastating blow to the darknet underworld, shattering Haowang Guarantee, the colossal $27 billion marketplace that festered as a cesspool of crypto scams and cybercrime since 2021. This behemoth, with nearly a million users, mostly Chinese-speaking, thrived on encrypted Telegram channels, peddling deepfake tools and laundering money via Tether stablecoin. Its ties to Cambodian political elites through Huione Group shielded it—until now. The Crypto Crackdown, fueled by blockchain analytics from Elliptic and scathing reports by WIRED, exposed its rot, forcing Telegram to act. On May 13, 2025, accounts were banned, and the empire crumbled. Where’s the accountability for those who let this monster grow? Victims fell prey to sophisticated phishing attacks targeting their crypto wallet credentials.
Let’s not pretend this is a victory lap, though. The shutdown, bolstered by U.S. Treasury sanctions on Huione Group, leaves vendors stranded, but don’t expect them to repent. User Migration is already underway, with these digital rats scurrying to other darknet dens, likely dragging their $98 billion transaction network with them. Haowang’s escrow system and NFT infrastructure, once hailed as “innovative” by naive tech enthusiasts, were just polished tools for crime. Isn’t it ironic how anonymity, their supposed fortress, crumbled under blockchain tracking? Telegram’s belated compliance reeks of damage control, not principle—why wait for external pressure to purge this filth? Additionally, the UN has linked Haowang to organized crime, including North Korea’s Lazarus group, which funneled $150,000 via Huione Pay. Elliptic’s research revealed Haowang’s staggering $27 billion in USDT transactions, underscoring the scale of this illicit empire.
The global black market feels the tremor, yet prosecution remains a pipe dream, jurisdiction a cruel joke. Haowang’s collapse affects a chunk of the crypto underworld’s economy, but don’t be fooled—others will rise. The frustration burns: how many more scams must bleed victims before platforms stop playing whack-a-mole? Demand better, because this isn’t just a shutdown; it’s a warning. The darknet doesn’t sleep, and neither should our vigilance. Act, or be complicit.