Crimenetwork returns after takedown, dismantled again by German authorities


Crimenetwork returns after takedown, dismantled again by German authorities

Pierluigi Paganini
May 11, 2026

German police shut down a revived Crimenetwork marketplace with 22,000 users and 100+ sellers months after the original takedown.

German police dismantled a resurrected version of the German-language cybercrime marketplace Crimenetwork, just months after the original platform was taken down. The second iteration of the site had already attracted more than 22,000 users and over 100 sellers, showing how quickly underground markets can recover when operators are able to rebuild their infrastructure.

According to German authorities, the marketplace was being used to trade a broad range of illegal goods and services, including stolen personal data, drugs, forged documents, and other criminal offerings. Payments were made through cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Litecoin, and Monero, making it easier for users to hide financial trails and move funds across borders. Investigators believe the platform generated more than €3.6 million in revenue before it was shut down.

Crimenetwork had originally been dismantled in December 2024. Since 2012, Crimenetwork facilitated the sale of illegal goods and services, including drugs, forged documents, hacking tools, and stolen data. The platform served as a hub for cybercriminals to trade and coordinate illegal operations.

At the time, police described it as the largest German-speaking criminal marketplace. Investigators estimated that more than $100 million in cryptocurrency had passed through the platform between 2018 and 2024, underlining the scale of the business and the level of trust it had built within the criminal underground.

In late 2024, police arrested a 29-year-old alleged admin of the marketplace, seized €1M in assets, and charged him with enabling sales of drugs, stolen data, and illegal services. He is not in custody.

Public Prosecutor’s Office in Frankfurt carried out the operation am Main, the Central Office for Combating Cybercrime (ZIT), and the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA).

What makes the latest takedown important is not only the shutdown itself, but also the arrest linked to the operation. Police said a 35-year-old German citizen suspected of being the administrator was detained in Mallorca by Spanish authorities. That arrest is significant because it suggests investigators were able to move beyond the platform’s technical infrastructure and identify a person directly involved in running it.

In addition to the arrest, law enforcement seized around €194,000 in assets connected to the marketplace. Authorities also obtained extensive user and transaction records, which are now being analyzed to better understand the criminal network behind the site and possibly identify vendors, buyers, and support actors who remained active on the platform.

The Crimenetwork case is a good reminder that online crime markets are often resilient. When one site is taken down, a successor may appear soon after on new servers, with a new interface and the same criminal audience. That happened here: the original platform was removed, but a new version emerged days later and quickly regained users and sellers.

Still, the case also shows that repeated law-enforcement pressure can make these markets harder to sustain. A marketplace is not just software. It depends on administrators, payment handling, trust systems, and a stable community of vendors and buyers. Once police start seizing data, freezing assets, and arresting people behind the scenes, rebuilding becomes much harder.

German police have been increasingly active against this type of infrastructure. The Crimenetwork operation fits into a broader pattern of investigations targeting cybercrime forums, darknet shops, and other illicit marketplaces that serve as distribution hubs for stolen data and fraud tools. These actions matter because marketplaces like this do not just sell illegal products; they help professionalize cybercrime by giving offenders a place to meet, trade, and scale their operations.

Other successful German police actions against online crime marketplaces show the same approach: follow the money, collect transaction data, identify the administrators, and work with foreign partners when suspects or servers are abroad. That combination has repeatedly led to arrests and seizures that weaken the ecosystem behind the platforms.

In April 2022, German authorities shut down Hydra, one of the world’s largest dark web marketplace. The seizure of the Hydra Market is the result of an international investigation conducted by the Central Office for Combating Cybercrime (ZIT) in partnership with U.S. law enforcement authorities since August 2021.

Hydra was a top Russian Darknet market famous among Russian speaking users that have been active since 2015.

According to the authorities, its sales amounted to at least 1.23 billion euros in 2020 alone. The German police seized approximately EUR 23 million worth of Bitcoin. The German authorities reported that around 17 million customers and over 19,000 seller accounts were registered on the Hydra Market.

The key lesson from Crimenetwork is clear. Shutting down a site is important, but the real disruption comes when investigators also remove the people, funds, and data that keep it alive. Without that pressure, a marketplace can return almost immediately. With it, the cost of rebuilding rises sharply.

For law enforcement, that makes marketplace disruption less of a one-time operation and more of a long campaign. For the criminal underground, it is a warning that even a revived platform may not stay online for long.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, cybercrime)







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The Windows Insider Program is about to get much easier

Ed Bott / Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.


ZDNET’s key takeaways

  • Microsoft is making the Insider Program less complicated.
  • Beta channel will be a more reliable preview of the next retail release.
  • Other changes will allow testers to quickly enable/disable new features.

Last month, Microsoft took official notice of its customers’ many complaints about Windows 11. Pavan Davaluri, the executive vice president who runs the Windows and Devices group, promised sweeping changes to Windows 11. Today, the company announced the first of those changes in a post authored by Alec Oot, who’s been the principal group product manager for the Windows Insider Program since January 2024.

Those changes will streamline the Insider program, which has lost sight of its original goals in the past few years. (For a brief history of the program and what had gone wrong, see my post from last November: “The Windows Insider Program is a confusing mess.”)

Also: If Microsoft really wants to fix Windows 11, it should do these four things ASAP

If you’re currently participating in the Windows Insider Program, these are meaningful changes. Here’s what you can expect.

Simplifying the Insider channel lineup

Throughout the Windows 11 era, signing up for the Insider program has required choosing one of four channels using a dialog in Windows Settings. Here’s what those options look like today on one of my test PCs.

insider-program-channels-lineup-old

The current Insider channel lineup is confusing, to say the least.

Screenshot by Ed Bott/ZDNET

Which channel should you choose? As the company admitted in today’s post, “the channel structure became confusing. It was not clear what channel to pick based on what you wanted to get out of the program.”

The new lineup consists of two primary channels: Experimental and Beta. The Release Preview channel will still be available, primarily for the benefit of corporate customers who want early access to production builds a few days before their official release. That option will be available under the Advanced Options section.

windows-insider-channel-lineup-new

This simplified lineup is easier to follow. Beta is the upcoming retail release, Experimental is for the adventurous.

Screenshot courtesy of Microsoft

Here’s Microsoft’s official description of what’s in each channel now, with the company’s emphasis retained:

  • Experimental replaces what were previously the Dev and Canary channels. The name is deliberate: you’re getting early access to features under active development, with the understanding that what you see may change, get delayed, or not ship at all. We’ve heard your feedback that you want to access and contribute to features early in development and this is the channel to do that.
  • Beta is a refresh of the previous Beta Channel and previews what we plan to ship in the coming weeks. The big change: we’re ending gradual feature rollouts in Beta. When we announce a feature in a Beta update and you take that update, you will have that feature. You may occasionally see small differences within a feature as we test variations, but the feature itself will always be on your device.

These changes will apply to the Windows Insider Program for Business as well.

Offering a choice of platforms

For those testers who want to tinker with the bleeding edge of Windows development, a few additional options will be available in the Experimental channel. These advanced options will allow you to choose from a platform that’s aligned to a currently supported retail build. Currently, that’s Windows 11 version 25H2 or 26H1, with the latter being exclusively for new hardware arriving soon with Snapdragon X2 Arm chips.

Also: Microsoft account vs. local account: How to choose

There will also be a Future Platforms option, which represents a preview build that is not aligned to a retail version of Windows. According to today’s announcement, this option is “aimed at users who are looking to be at the forefront of platform development. Insiders looking for the earliest access to features should remain on a version aligned to a retail build.”

windows-insider-advanced-options-new

The Future Platforms option is the equivalent of the current Canary channel

Screenshot courtesy of Microsoft

Minimizing the chaos of Controlled Feature Rollout

Last month, I urged Microsoft to stop using its Controlled Feature Rollout technology, especially for builds in the Beta channel. Apparently, someone in Redmond was listening.

One of the most common questions we receive from Insiders is “why don’t I have access to a feature that’s been announced in a WIP blog?” This is usually due to a technology called Controlled Feature Rollout (CFR), a gradual process of rolling out new features to ensure quality before releasing to wider audiences. These gradual rollouts are an industry standard that help us measure impact before releasing more broadly. But they also make your experience unpredictable and often mean you don’t get the new features that motivated many of you to join the Insider program to begin with.

Moving forward, Insider builds in the Beta channel will no longer suffer from this gradual rollout of features. Meanwhile, the company says, “Insiders in the Experimental channel will have a new ability to enable or disable specific features via the new Feature Flags page on the Windows Insider Program settings page.”

windows-insider-feature-flags

Builds in the Experimental channel will include the option to turn new features on or off.

Screenshot courtesy of Microsoft

Not every feature will be available from this list, but the intent is to add those flags for “visible new features” that are announced as part of a new Insider build.

Making it easier to change channels

The final change announced today is one I didn’t see coming. Historically, leaving the Windows Insider Program or downgrading a channel (from Dev to Beta, for example) has required a full wipe and reinstall. That’s a major hurdle and a big impediment to anyone who doesn’t have the time or technical skills to do that sort of migration.

Also: Why Microsoft is forcing Windows 11 25H2 update on all eligible PCs

Beginning with the new channel lineup, it should be easier to change channels or leave the program without jumping through a bunch of hoops.

To make this a more streamlined and consistent experience, we’re making some behind the scenes changes to enable Insider builds to use an in-place upgrade (IPU) to hop between versions. This will allow in most cases Insiders to move between Experimental, Beta, and Release Preview on the same Windows core version, or leave the program without a clean install. An IPU takes a bit more time than your normal update but migrates your apps, settings, and data in-place.

If you’ve chosen one of the future platforms from the Experimental channel, those options don’t apply. To move back to a supported retail platform, you’ll need to do a clean install.

Also: Apple, Google, and Microsoft join Anthropic’s Project Glasswing to defend world’s most critical software

The upshot of all these changes should make things a lot clearer for anyone trying to figure out what’s coming in the next big feature update. Beta channel updates, for example, should offer a more accurate preview of what’s coming in the next big feature update, so over the next month or two we should get a better picture of what’s coming in the 26H2 release, due in October.

When can we start to see those changes rolling out to the general public? Stay tuned.





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