Company Behind Illicit $24B Telegram Marketplaces Launches Stablecoin
Huione's stablecoin is "not restricted" by regulatory agencies.

What to know:
- Illicit goods marketplace Huione has rolled out a stablecoin and its own chat service as it looks to distance itself from third-party services like Telegram and Tether.
- Elliptic claims Huione has facilitated $24 billion worth of transactions related to money laundering, fraud, personal data and pig butchering.
Huione, a Telegram-based illicit marketplace that offers personal data and money laundering services has rolled out its own stablecoin, according to report by blockchain security firm Elliptic.
The stablecoin (USDH) was created to “avoid the common freezing and transfer restrictions of traditional digital currencies.” The Huione website adds that “USDH is not restricted by traditional regulatory agencies.”
Prior to the launch of USDH, users on Huione were almost exclusively using
The company also released its own chat service to make it less reliant on third-party apps like Telegram.
The report claims that Huione has facilitated $24 billion worth of transactions including a large portion of the funds used in infamous pig butchering scams. It is a Chinese-language market and has links to Huione Group, a Cambodian conglomerate.
Elliptic research found that "thousands of vendors" are offering "money laundering services, stolen personal data, technology and other items necessary to conduct online fraud on an industrial scale." It also found electric shackles intended for use on human trafficking victims.
One of the money laundering services claims to be representing and operating from the Golden Fortune Science and Technology Park, a reported labor camp that forces Vietnamese, Malaysian and Chinese nationals to carry out cyberscams.
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