Abstract This research investigates how cryptocurrencies are used in illegal markets, including darknet marketplaces, ransomware payments, and money laundering. The study examines transaction patterns, anonymity techniques, and the tools used by cybercriminals to hide illicit flows. To understand the increasing complexity of these activities, the research explores how digital currencies enable fast, borderless, and pseudonymous transactions that often bypass traditional financial regulations and monitoring systems. The study combines blockchain analysis, case studies, and expert observations to map these illegal flows and identify system vulnerabilities. By assessing the role of mixing services, privacy-oriented cryptocurrencies, decentralized exchanges, and chain-hopping techniques, the research highlights the methods used to obscure the origin and destination of digital assets. These insights help reveal how criminals exploit technology to move funds in ways that challenge traditional policing mechanisms. The findings aim to provide valuable insights for policymakers, cryptocurrency exchanges, and law enforcement agencies to improve detection, prevention, and regulation of illicit cryptocurrency activities. The research also examines current regulatory frameworks, global compliance standards, and existing technological tools used to trace illegal transactions. Furthermore, it discusses the challenges faced by authorities, including cross-border jurisdiction issues, lack of unified regulations, and the rapid advancement of blockchain technologies. Overall, this study contributes to a deeper understanding of how illegal cryptocurrency markets operate and highlights opportunities for strengthening cybercrime prevention through improved regulations, data-sharing frameworks, and innovative blockchain forensic solutions.
Date et al. (Sat,) studied this question.