Tether has frozen approximately $3.3 billion across 7,268 Ethereum and TRON addresses, eclipsing Circle’s freeze of $109 million over 372 addresses. Tether’s proactive approach involves freezing, burning, and reissuing assets, while Circle responds to legal orders.
Tether’s extensive blacklists reflect varying stablecoin control approaches, raising concerns over user asset security. Broader implications include scrutiny over centralized authority’s role in DeFi platforms.
Tether initiated significant freezes amounting to $3.3 billion across 7,268 addresses, outmatching USDC’s $109 million total on Ethereum and TRON networks. The proactive action by Tether contrasts with Circle’s reliance on judicial directives for account freezes.
Circle focuses on legal compliance, only initiating account freezes upon court orders. Meanwhile, Tether’s proactive strategy collaborates with U.S. law enforcement, thereby surpassing Circle in both volume and value of frozen accounts.
Tether’s freeze actions, largely on TRON, stress differences between centralized and decentralized finance. Circle’s judicial model could protect user rights in politically volatile contexts. Meanwhile, Tether’s freezes underscore potential control over user assets within decentralized ecosystems.
The implications of these actions may reshape public perception of stablecoin trustworthiness. As both companies continue to defend their models, the highlighted contrast prompts investor consideration of centralized authority in digital ecosystems. Potential outcomes range from calls for increased decentralized protocols to reinforced regulatory scrutiny.
Paolo Ardoino, CTO, Tether – “Tether remains committed to ensuring compliance and security within the crypto ecosystem by proactively managing blacklisted addresses.”


