One darknet empire disappears. Another privacy protocol is born.
The darknet just lost a king.
Abacus Market, the West’s largest Bitcoin-based drug marketplace, has vanished into digital smoke — users locked out, withdrawals frozen, admins MIA. It’s giving classic exit scam energy, and TRM Labs has already confirmed: the infrastructure is gone.
No press release. No goodbye. Just silence and suspicion.
Welcome to crypto’s underworld, where the stakes are real, the exits are fast, and 400 million can disappear overnight.
At its peak, Abacus processed hundreds of millions in BTC, slinging drugs, digital goods, and straight-up cybercrime. It thrived for four years — a lifetime on the darknet — and surged in popularity after Archetyp shut down.
Then July hit, and deposits dropped by 90%. Admin chat went quiet. Then—poof—gone.
The “official” excuse? DDoS attacks and overload. But if you’ve been around long enough, you know: That's the exit scam playbook.
Law enforcement has been closing in. Just weeks ago, 145 darknet domains were seized worldwide. The message is clear: No one's untouchable anymore.
While one corner of the dark web collapses, another is being reborn — this time above ground and decentralized.
Enter TON Proxy 2.0: a next-gen privacy tool built by The Open Network (TON) community.
Forget Tor. TON Proxy uses something called garlic routing to mask not just your IP — but also the destination site’s. It's fully censorship-resistant, peer-to-peer, and built without trusting middlemen like Cloudflare.
And soon, with TON Proxy 3.0, users can earn Toncoin by running nodes — creating an economy of privacy, not surveillance.
Abacus was anonymous—but centralized. It died the way most darknet markets die: silently, selfishly, and without accountability.
TON Proxy is decentralized and incentivized. It doesn’t need a CEO or admins to keep running. It’s censorship-proof by design — not by promise.
But let’s be clear: with great privacy comes great responsibility. Tools like TON Proxy could just as easily power dissidents… or dealers.
That’s the double-edged sword of decentralization.
Web3 privacy isn’t coming. It’s already here.
Have questions or want to collaborate? Reach us at: info@ath.live