In October 2025, Paxos accidentally issued a whopping 300 trillion PYUSD tokens. At 1$ per token, the amount was equivalent to 300 $ trillion, more than twice the global Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The error was most likely caused by an internal technical issue or a data entry error where more zeros than needed were added during a routine internal transaction.
Being a centralized stablecoin, Paxos immediately identified the mistake and burned the entire 300 trillion tokens within about 20-30 minutes. Although it was resolved extremely quickly, the incident highlighted operational vulnerabilities and raised concerns that such a huge amount of tokens could be created without proper reserves, even if only temporarily. Paxos assured that customer funds were never at risk.
Contrary to the crypto ideal of decentralization and open source, PYUSD perpetuates the “Trust Me” model of traditional finance. Despite regulations, the incident proved that the system is at the mercy of a simple wrong keystroke. In a liquidity crisis or under pressure, a similar error could have irreversible consequences. PYUSD does not bring anything new from a blockchain perspective; it is a tokenized dollar, controlled by a single entity that can freeze accounts or block transactions if legally or operationally necessary. For the crypto community, this is a betrayal of the principle of financial freedom.
PYUSD, with its partnership with PayPal, has the potential to become a widely used trading currency, but not as a benchmark for security or innovation. It is a tool that masks operational risk under the guise of “regulated stability.” While it promises simplicity for PayPal users, the trillion-dollar missteps early on show that beneath the corporate facade lurk the same human and systemic vulnerabilities that threaten trust. Can it be taken seriously, PYUSD??
There is an even bigger issue that is scratching my head, especially for those of us who are running away from centralized control: the risk of freezing money. PYUSD is not a decentralized currency that lives free on the blockchain. It is a digital dollar issued and controlled by Paxos, a PayPal partner, an entity subject to US financial laws and regulations.
https://youtube.com/shorts/uVv4IsTj0aY?si=4MrA91fABw04HxIr
That simply means that someone has the off button.
Consider this: PYUSD’s smart contract includes features that allow the issuer (Paxos) to freeze addresses. If a digital wallet is flagged as suspicious—whether it’s a government investigation, a legal dispute, or simply a decision by Paxos based on their own terms of service—they can press a button, and all your money, all your PYUSD, becomes worthless.
Why is this so dangerous?
- In a crisis or political disagreement, your money is no longer yours. It becomes a conditional dependency on the goodwill of a corporation and the regulators who oversee it. If you’re fed up with PayPal’s policies or fees, they can freeze your funds, something they can’t do with cash or your Bitcoin. 
- When you trade decentralized crypto, you’re your own banker. If you are blocked by PayPal, you are thrown into legal trouble, and recovering your money becomes a bureaucratic nightmare. 
- A PYUSD is not designed for anonymity or freedom, but for surveillance and compliance. Every move can be tracked, and if you do not "adhere" to the rules imposed by the issuer, you are subject to instant financial exclusion. 
So, i don't know, but from my point of view - PYUSD is not just a token that stumbled at the start. It is a symbol of the effort to bring the absolute control of traditional finance (TradFi) to the crypto world, where freedom should be the rule. If you want your money to truly be yours, PYUSD is a step backwards....Not recommended - Try and stay away from this institutional scam. Okay, it is not a scam in the classic sense of fraud, but it is a risk disguised as authority. It replaces the inherent risk of volatility of crypto with the much more insidious risk of financial censorship and institutional error.