Crypto news

22.06.2026
18:34

Freeze and Reissue: How Tether Turned USDT into a Tool of Global Control and Why Bitcoin Remains the Only Alternative

USDT freeze mechanism

Why Bitcoin Is Still the Only Way Out of This Trap

With a market capitalization of around $186 billion, USDT has become the digital dollar for millions of people worldwide. However, the token's issuer, Tether, can freeze funds at any specific address at any time, and as practice shows, it regularly exercises this right. In just the last six months, 2,362 addresses on the Ethereum and TRON networks have been blacklisted, with $1.64 billion locked on them. Typically, such decisions involve hackers and scammers, but the mere possibility of a freeze means that even on a non-custodial wallet, the holder does not fully control their tokens.

Together with the team behind the Bitcoin mixer Mixer.Money, we explore how the USDT freeze mechanism works, why ordinary users sometimes get caught up in it, and why holding funds in stablecoins is riskier than holding Bitcoin.

The Ardoino List: How Tether's Blacklist Works

USDT is a centralized stablecoin, and Tether does not hide this fact. Company CEO Paolo Ardoino emphasizes this feature of the token, contrasting it with supposedly decentralized projects. The ability to block an address and forcibly destroy tokens is embedded in Tether's smart contracts on Ethereum (ERC-20), TRON (TRC-20), Solana, and other networks. The function names may vary, but the principle is the same:

  • addBlackList — the address owner loses the ability to send USDT; any transfer is rejected at the contract level. The address itself remains active: it can receive new USDT and freely use the network's native coin (ETH, TRX, SOL).
  • removeBlackList — restores the ability to transfer tokens.
  • destroyBlackFunds — irreversibly burns USDT at the blocked address. The owner will no longer be able to recover them.

After burning, Tether can issue an equivalent amount of tokens at another address. Reissuance is used when funds are returned to victims or transferred to wallets under law enforcement control. "In other words, the issuer can take dollars from one address and reissue them in favor of another," notes Mixer.Money. According to BlockSec estimates, it takes an average of about two days between the issuance of a freeze order and its execution on the network. You can check the status of an address on the Ethereum and TRON networks using a special checker.

Promissory Note vs. Digital Gold

Behind every freeze is an external request. Tether freezes an address based on a single verified request from law enforcement — without warning the holder or providing an appeals process before the freeze. The user learns about the restriction only after the fact. The T3 Financial Crime Unit (T3 FCU) — a joint project of Tether, TRON, and analytics firm TRM Labs — carries out the freeze within 24 hours. Since September 2024, the alliance has frozen over $450 million across 23 jurisdictions.

The stablecoins themselves are flagged for freezing by on-chain analytics companies like Chainalysis, Elliptic, and TRM Labs. They assign risk levels to wallets and link them together. If an address receives a high risk score, AML systems also raise the score for wallets associated with it. Sometimes, random users whose coins once passed through a recognized "dirty" address end up under restrictions. Analysts also track Bitcoin, but it is impossible to take it from its owner without the private keys.

USDT and USDC are debt obligations of a centralized issuer. It retains control at the contract level: blocking transfers, burning balances, and reissuing amounts. The holder controls the private keys, but not the token's rules. Bitcoin has no administrator, no blacklist functions, and no "big red button" like destroyBlackFunds. There is simply no one to execute such a request. However, the risk of freezing does not disappear entirely. It shifts from the protocol level to the level of exchanges, swap services, and other centralized platforms — where users have their documents checked and accounts can be frozen.

Attempts to impose censorship within the Bitcoin network itself have already been made. In 2021, mining company MARA launched the first OFAC-compliant pool in North America, which filtered transactions based on sanctions lists. The community saw this as a threat of censorship at the block production level and sharply criticized the initiative. Two months after the announcement, MARA abandoned the experiment. Converting USDT to Bitcoin removes the risk of freezing at the issuer level, but does not eliminate on-chain surveillance: contrary to popular belief, the first cryptocurrency is not anonymous, but pseudonymous.

Privacy After Conversion: How to Break the On-Chain Trail

To hide the link between addresses, additional tools are required. There are several ways to break the on-chain trail, each with its own limitations:

  • CoinJoin — a joint mixing of coins from multiple users in a single transaction. This mechanism is usually recognized by analytics systems, so the mere fact of using CoinJoin can increase an address's risk score.
  • Centralized mixers — they do not combine users in a single transaction but instead receive funds into their own pool and then send other coins. This allows breaking the direct on-chain link between input and output, but requires trust in the service operator.
  • Bitcoin mixers using verified coins — they do not mix user funds with each other and do not use their own liquidity pool. Instead, they utilize verified clean coins from trusted investors, allowing them to break the direct on-chain link between incoming and outgoing transactions. Mixer.Money falls into this last category. Unlike CoinJoin, it does not mix funds from different participants. The bitcoin.mixer 2.0 algorithm uses verified clean bitcoins from trusted investors, enabling it to break the direct link between incoming and outgoing transactions.

In "Full Anonymity" mode, coins are split into random parts in a premixer and sent to independent investors. After a random interval, which protects against timestamp analysis, the sender receives an equivalent amount minus the fee. The funds arrive at two new addresses not linked on-chain to the original wallet. "CoinJoin is easily identifiable on-chain and itself increases the risk score. Many exchanges and swap services warn about account blocking for using such services," emphasizes Mixer.Money.

Panopticon Tether: The Flip Side of Control

The freeze function helps investigate crimes and return funds to scam victims. During its operation, T3 FCU has been involved in cases related to money laundering, drug trafficking, terrorist financing, and activities of North Korean hacker groups. FATF has called the unit an "invaluable resource for law enforcement agencies worldwide." Such activities contribute to growing regulatory trust in the crypto industry as a whole.

But this system also has a downside. USDT remains a centralized asset, and access to funds ultimately depends on decisions by the issuer and requests from authorities. In essence, the stablecoin has become a node in a global surveillance system: a private company, connected to hundreds of agencies and analytics services, can freeze "digital dollars" almost anywhere in the world. In this sense, the USDT ecosystem resembles a digital panopticon: most users never directly encounter restrictions but know that such a possibility exists. The effectiveness of this mechanism strengthens regulatory trust but simultaneously continues to blur the boundaries of financial autonomy, which are already narrowing as cash is gradually phased out. "Diversification" among major stablecoins merely spreads the dependency across different companies, but the freeze architecture itself remains.

Bitcoin has neither an administrator nor a single control center, so there is simply no one to execute a request to freeze funds at the protocol level. This makes it the only major digital asset that does not depend on decisions by an issuer, regulator, or bank. The first cryptocurrency cannot be frozen, seized, or burned by a third party's decision, and its issuance rules remain unchanged regardless of state inflation policies or legislative changes. Bitcoin protects against arbitrary fund freezes but does not hide financial activity from prying eyes. All transactions are recorded in a public ledger and can be analyzed years after they are made. Privacy-enhancing solutions like Mixer.Money help reduce the digital footprint.

Expert opinion from Cryptalist: The stablecoin market, especially USDT, demonstrates that centralization can be convenient, but it also carries a fundamental risk of losing control over assets. While investors and traders chase liquidity and stability, they fail to notice how their financial freedom turns into an illusion. Bitcoin, despite its volatility, remains the only truly sovereign digital asset that cannot be blocked or seized. For those who value privacy and independence, using tools like Mixer.Money is not a luxury but a necessity.