When you publish a series of investigations about a company that has long operated in the shadows and just days later, their entire infrastructure begins to vanish-you know you’ve hit a nerve. That’s exactly what happened after our reports on Transactworld Limited. Only a few days after publishing “Masks of Tallinn”, “The Man Behind the Gate” and “The Illusion of Compliance”, the internet suddenly lit up with silent edits, redirects, and vanished gateways. Domains were replaced, logos changed, API endpoints moved. Officially: modernization. In reality: a panic-driven cleanup of everything our investigation exposed.

💳 Transactworld disappears, Gozappay appears-pure coincidence? Not this time:

The payment domain secure.transactworld.com, previously used to process transactions for “shops” like Rippletheme and other paper-shell fronts, suddenly vanished.

Its identical replacement?
secure.gozappay.com.
A new logo, a new name-yet the same code, same bugs, same interface.

Look closer and you’ll see it’s all there:
/transaction/Checkout-same endpoint, same routing structure, even the same “invalid currency” error message.

No one builds a new payment gateway that replicates their old bugs line by line.
Unless, of course, it’s not new at all.

🧠 Google doesn’t lie- Gozappay still calls itself “TransactWorld”:

Here’s where it gets truly embarrassing.
Type docs.gozappay.com into Google, and you’ll see this:

“Transact World-Withdraw Money”
“Transact World-REST API Specifications”

That’s right. The “new” Gozappay documentation still identifies itself as Transact World. The name was changed on the front door, but the business card inside stayed the same. This isn’t rebranding.
It’s cosmetic surgery performed by panic.

🕵️‍♂️ The cleanup timeline: how the digital erasure began:

After Spinangacase published its investigative series exposing Transactworld’s network of shell companies and shadow payment processing, a pattern emerged almost instantly:

The same “shop” websites (Rippletheme, Wexslide.com, Themewhirl, etc.) began redirecting to new domains, Transactworld gateways stopped functioning and Gozappay gateways appeared in the exact same locations- identical layout, identical parameters. This wasn’t innovation. It was digital laundering of evidence.

⚙️ The scheme: change the name, keep the backend:

This is a classic offshore maneuver.
Change the name, color, and domain, pretend it’s a fresh start-while keeping the same servers, same APIs, same SSL certificates, same merchant IDs. Gozappay isn’t a new company. It’s Transactworld with a fresh coat of paint and a panic-induced identity crisis.

⚖️ The irony-lawyers send threats while servers burn:

While Troutman Pepper Locke LLP sent us a formal “pre-litigation notice” defending Transactworld’s reputation, their client was busy switching gateways and scrubbing traces from Google.

Perfect timing, right?
Legal threats in one hand, domain migration in the other. If this isn’t guilt in motion, what is?

📎 Evidence that won’t be deleted:

Identical endpoints: /transaction/Checkout

Identical API errors and routing logic

Identical layouts between Transactworld and GoZappay

Google indexing Gozappay as “Transact World”

Rippletheme transaction logs: 3× €1430.18 in five minutes

Every line, every timestamp, every cached page tells the same story:
this is not coincidence-it’s continuity.

💬 Conclusion: new logo, same dirty hands:

You can rebrand a gateway, but you can’t erase fingerprints. You can rename the API, but you can’t rewrite Google’s memory and you can hire lawyers, but they can’t debug your past. Transactworld may now call itself Gozappay, but under the hood it’s still the same machinery that fueled unlicensed payments and shadow operations across countless “digital stores.”, because no matter what logo they put on the door-the code doesn’t lie.