Telegram is the messaging app for carders everywhere — fast, convenient, and easy to use. It doesn’t matter whether you’re moving $$$ or just trying to stay in touch with everyone on there. And let’s be real — the alternatives are garbage. Jabber looks like it runs on Windows 95, Signals is a ghost town with basic features, and Discord? That’s where script kiddies go to pretend to be l33t hackers.
But here’s the thing: Telegram is not your friend. Those recent headlines about them bowing to governments? That’s not just news — it’s a damn warning shot if there ever was one. If you’re moving weight or running schemes on Telegram, you better believe they’ll give you everything they’ve got the moment they come knocking.
So if you’re serious about staying free and keeping your business running, you need to know how to up your Telegram game. Because when (not if) they cave in to the pressure, you want them to find nothing but digital tumbleweed when they come for you.
End-to-end encryption
End-to-end encryption (E2E) means your messages are encrypted from the moment they leave your device until they reach the recipient. No intermediary — not even Telegram — can read them. It’s like having a private conversation in a soundproof room, rather than shouting across a crowded street.
But here’s the rub — Telegram doesn’t use E2E by default. Your regular chats? That shit is stored in cleartext on their servers. Every message, every file, every dick pic you’ve sent is waiting to be handed over to whoever comes with a warrant. And Telegram’s track record shows that they’ll fold faster than a cheap lawn chair when the authorities come knocking.
The good news? Telegram offers E2E through its “Secret Chats” feature. You have to manually enable it, but once you do, your messages are effectively end-to-end encrypted. The app generates unique encryption keys for each chat that never leave your devices.
If you’re pitching a product or discussing something racy on Telegram, enabling Secret Chats is your first line of defense. Yes, they’re clunkier than regular chats—both users must be online to start one, as it must exchange encryption keys, and you can’t access the chat from multiple devices. But those minor inconveniences are better than having your messages exposed in a lawsuit.
Think of regular Telegram chats as writing your crimes on a postcard, and Secret Chats as using invisible ink that only your recipient can read. That extra layer of security could be the difference between freedom and federal housing.
Phone Number
Phone numbers are Telegram’s weakness. Unlike Jabber, where you can sign up anonymously with any email address, Telegram requires SMS verification. That phone number becomes a permanent link to your identity—a digital fingerprint of your device that could frame you if things go wrong.
So if you’re serious about OPSEC, you need to separate your Telegram from any number that’s tracking you. There are a few approaches, but most are as secure as a paper condom:
Online SMS services.
The laziest option is to use online SMS receivers. Services like SMSPool allow you to “borrow” numbers for verification. Some of them are even free. But here’s the big problem: these numbers are publicly available. Anyone can access them, which means anyone can try to log into your account.
Burning SIM cards.
Buying a prepaid SIM card with cash seems like a smart move at first glance. You verify your account, then throw the SIM card away like a hot potato, right? Wrong. This approach is riddled with holes:
Telegram Private Numbers.
Telegram knew their SMS requirement was a privacy nightmare. But instead of fixing it, they resorted to the classic tech company move of creating a paid solution to the problem they were causing. Enter Telegram private numbers, purchased with their TON cryptocurrency.
These numbers are the only real solution for proper OPSEC. They are tied exclusively to your TON wallet, which you can fund with properly mixed cryptocurrency. No physical purchase, no activation traces, no risk of deactivation. The only catch? They are damn expensive, and the prices keep rising. But that’s the price of true privacy — you either pay up or accept the risk of your nonce burning you.
Think of it this way: A private number is your clean license plate. Yes, it costs more than stealing the numbers or using counterfeits, but it’s the difference between a professional and an amateur. It’s pricey, but not as much as explaining to a judge how that $2 disposable SIM card connects you to a massive fraud operation.
IP Address
Unless you’ve been living under a fucking rock, you’ve seen Telegram’s recent memo detailing their procedures for collaborating with governments. And the juiciest part? They don’t just hand over phone numbers or chat logs — they hand over IP addresses on a silver platter. That one detail tells you everything you need to know about how important it is to never log into Telegram from your real IP.
Sure, you have the standard solutions — VPNs, residential proxies, the usual suspects. But they won’t be foolproof when the shit hits the fan. VPN kill switches fail (and they always fail at the worst possible time), residential proxies leave you with breadcrumbs, and both can be compromised, resulting in you getting screwed.
But here’s what strikes me – hardly anyone uses the most obvious solution: TOR. Telegram has a built-in proxy feature that’s right there in the settings, and if you use a TOR proxy on your system, you can route all your Telegram traffic through it. No VPN nonsense, no dodgy residential proxies, just pure anonymous routing through the TOR network. If TOR goes down, no traffic is sent, no leaks!
Staying Safe While Using Telegram
Telegram is a powerful tool, but it’s also a ticking time bomb if you don’t take precautions. Every feature we’ve covered — E2E encryption, private numbers, TOR routing — isn’t an optional extra. It’s your digital armor in a world where platforms buckle under pressure and privacy is treated as a premium feature.
The choice is simple: either harden your setup now, or wait until your OPSEC failures haunt you. And trust me, by then it will be too late.
(c) Telegram: d0ctrine
But here’s the thing: Telegram is not your friend. Those recent headlines about them bowing to governments? That’s not just news — it’s a damn warning shot if there ever was one. If you’re moving weight or running schemes on Telegram, you better believe they’ll give you everything they’ve got the moment they come knocking.
So if you’re serious about staying free and keeping your business running, you need to know how to up your Telegram game. Because when (not if) they cave in to the pressure, you want them to find nothing but digital tumbleweed when they come for you.
End-to-end encryption
End-to-end encryption (E2E) means your messages are encrypted from the moment they leave your device until they reach the recipient. No intermediary — not even Telegram — can read them. It’s like having a private conversation in a soundproof room, rather than shouting across a crowded street.
But here’s the rub — Telegram doesn’t use E2E by default. Your regular chats? That shit is stored in cleartext on their servers. Every message, every file, every dick pic you’ve sent is waiting to be handed over to whoever comes with a warrant. And Telegram’s track record shows that they’ll fold faster than a cheap lawn chair when the authorities come knocking.
The good news? Telegram offers E2E through its “Secret Chats” feature. You have to manually enable it, but once you do, your messages are effectively end-to-end encrypted. The app generates unique encryption keys for each chat that never leave your devices.
If you’re pitching a product or discussing something racy on Telegram, enabling Secret Chats is your first line of defense. Yes, they’re clunkier than regular chats—both users must be online to start one, as it must exchange encryption keys, and you can’t access the chat from multiple devices. But those minor inconveniences are better than having your messages exposed in a lawsuit.
Think of regular Telegram chats as writing your crimes on a postcard, and Secret Chats as using invisible ink that only your recipient can read. That extra layer of security could be the difference between freedom and federal housing.
Phone Number
Phone numbers are Telegram’s weakness. Unlike Jabber, where you can sign up anonymously with any email address, Telegram requires SMS verification. That phone number becomes a permanent link to your identity—a digital fingerprint of your device that could frame you if things go wrong.
So if you’re serious about OPSEC, you need to separate your Telegram from any number that’s tracking you. There are a few approaches, but most are as secure as a paper condom:
Online SMS services.
The laziest option is to use online SMS receivers. Services like SMSPool allow you to “borrow” numbers for verification. Some of them are even free. But here’s the big problem: these numbers are publicly available. Anyone can access them, which means anyone can try to log into your account.
Burning SIM cards.
Buying a prepaid SIM card with cash seems like a smart move at first glance. You verify your account, then throw the SIM card away like a hot potato, right? Wrong. This approach is riddled with holes:
- If you ever log out, you will need this number again for the SMS code.
- Prepaid SIM cards are deactivated after periods of inactivity
- Activation leaves traces - where you bought it, what device activated it, location data
- Physical purchases create witnesses and camera footage
Telegram Private Numbers.
Telegram knew their SMS requirement was a privacy nightmare. But instead of fixing it, they resorted to the classic tech company move of creating a paid solution to the problem they were causing. Enter Telegram private numbers, purchased with their TON cryptocurrency.
These numbers are the only real solution for proper OPSEC. They are tied exclusively to your TON wallet, which you can fund with properly mixed cryptocurrency. No physical purchase, no activation traces, no risk of deactivation. The only catch? They are damn expensive, and the prices keep rising. But that’s the price of true privacy — you either pay up or accept the risk of your nonce burning you.
Think of it this way: A private number is your clean license plate. Yes, it costs more than stealing the numbers or using counterfeits, but it’s the difference between a professional and an amateur. It’s pricey, but not as much as explaining to a judge how that $2 disposable SIM card connects you to a massive fraud operation.
IP Address
Unless you’ve been living under a fucking rock, you’ve seen Telegram’s recent memo detailing their procedures for collaborating with governments. And the juiciest part? They don’t just hand over phone numbers or chat logs — they hand over IP addresses on a silver platter. That one detail tells you everything you need to know about how important it is to never log into Telegram from your real IP.
Sure, you have the standard solutions — VPNs, residential proxies, the usual suspects. But they won’t be foolproof when the shit hits the fan. VPN kill switches fail (and they always fail at the worst possible time), residential proxies leave you with breadcrumbs, and both can be compromised, resulting in you getting screwed.
But here’s what strikes me – hardly anyone uses the most obvious solution: TOR. Telegram has a built-in proxy feature that’s right there in the settings, and if you use a TOR proxy on your system, you can route all your Telegram traffic through it. No VPN nonsense, no dodgy residential proxies, just pure anonymous routing through the TOR network. If TOR goes down, no traffic is sent, no leaks!
Staying Safe While Using Telegram
Telegram is a powerful tool, but it’s also a ticking time bomb if you don’t take precautions. Every feature we’ve covered — E2E encryption, private numbers, TOR routing — isn’t an optional extra. It’s your digital armor in a world where platforms buckle under pressure and privacy is treated as a premium feature.
The choice is simple: either harden your setup now, or wait until your OPSEC failures haunt you. And trust me, by then it will be too late.
(c) Telegram: d0ctrine
