A TikTok feature that Pakistan’s dirty money loves |
A TikTok feature that Pakistan’s dirty money loves
Social media is now working as a high-speed pipeline to move money comfortably outside the perimeter of financial regulations. On TikTok and other apps, likes, gifts and livestream donations are converted into platform-specific digital credits. A follower buys virtual currency with their debit card, mobile wallet, or bank account, then sends gifts to the TikToker or creator during live streams or content interactions. The app takes a commission and sends the remaining ‘amount’ to the TikToker’s internal wallet. Once you earn a minimum amount, or cross a threshold, you can withdraw or transfer earnings through payment processors, digital wallets, or linked bank accounts into your local currency.
In practice, a transaction that begins as a seemingly harmless “gift” or online appreciation can pass through multiple layers — virtual tokens, platform wallets, payment intermediaries, and cross-border processors — before emerging as legitimate funds in a bank account. What appears on the surface as digital admiration may, in reality, become part of a complex financial pathway operating beyond the visibility of conventional oversight mechanisms.
A shadow financial channel has emerged, embedded within entertainment infrastructure, and it was only a matter of time before the wrong people started to pay attention.
Live hearts and roses
In 2025, unsealed state court documents, which were part of a consumer protection lawsuit by Utah’s Division of Consumer Protection, pulled back the curtain on Project Jupiter, a 2021 internal investigation by TikTok. The tech giant had harboured suspicions that organised crime was treating its live gifting feature for money laundering.
The internal investigation revealed a high risk of money laundering, but TikTok allegedly failed to do anything about it.
Financial authorities in Turkiye launched a probe when $82 million flowing through TikTok accounts reeked of terrorism financing. Regulators in Australia and the United Kingdom have begun questioning whether TikTok’s token system is actually a shadow banking service operating without a license. Even the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) has expressed concern, saying that digitally enabled crowdfunding has become a playground for those looking to fund terror.
All over the world, investigations have identified coordinated fraudulent donation networks operating through social media accounts, with academic research documenting hundreds of such schemes. The Financial Action Task Force has repeatedly warned that new payment technologies are being exploited for money laundering and terrorism financing. The United Nations Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate has highlighted how platforms enable cross-border fundraising with limited traceability. It has been documented that extremist networks have leveraged micro-donations at scale precisely because the pattern evades conventional detection.
The focus has........