FinTelegram's Zentoria compliance reporting is no longer a lonely warning shot. New investigations by Investigate Europe and Times of Malta independently reinforce the...
Softon and QCL Quad Code tried the infrastructure-abuse route against FinTelegram’s casino/payment reporting. Trinity Bugle picked up the story — and the Cemil Önal murder shows why this sector must be viewed through a press-freedom lens.
Softon and QCL Quad Code recently escalated disputed FinTelegram casino/payment reports through Cloudflare and hosting-abuse channels. The hoster declined to act, recognizing the complaints as editorial and reputational disputes — not technical abuse.
After FinTelegram’s reporting on Zentoria, Spinsopotamia and the NALMI casino-domain environment, the Spinsopotamia.com front appears to have moved from a 403-access-denied posture to a GoDaddy parking page. The change does not prove causation, but it raises fresh questions for PSPs, acquirers and regulators about merchant monitoring, descriptors and replacement domains.
In the wake of FinTelegram’s Zentoria/NALMI exposé, Spinsopotamia.com has abruptly switched from a live front end to a global HTTP 403 “Access denied” state, even as DNS, TLS and Cloudflare remain fully active. Our new technical record documents a repeatable, hard denial that regulators and PSPs can verify today.
FinTelegram explains the Zentoria / Spinsopotamia / NALMI case in plain English: how an EU-facing payment and website anchor may sit inside a much wider offshore casino-domain infrastructure. The technical evidence does not prove common ownership, but it challenges the idea that Spinsopotamia is merely an isolated standalone casino site.
FinTelegram has publishing a new Technical Annex as a companion annex to its recently released “Zentoria / Spinsopotamia and the NALMI Casino Network” Compliance Intelligence Report. The new dossier does not replace the main report; it deepens the public-source technical case around the Spinsopotamia.com anchor with preserved HTML, exact telemetry and configuration markers, cross-domain API dependencies, and direct catalogue-level asset links.
For months, FinTelegram has been tracking how Irish licensed bookmaker Zentoria and its billing descriptor “Spinsopotamia.com” appear in connection with offshore casino brands within the NovaForge network. Earlier reporting showed how deposits into brands such as Robycasino and Spinsy surfaced Zentoria and Spinsopotamia on player card statements, positioning the combo as an EU facing payment façade rather than a conventional operator brand.
A new technical evidence package reviewed by FinTelegram suggests that NALMI LIMITED (AS213846) may sit behind a large rotating casino-domain ecosystem. The material does not prove ownership or direct operation of the brands in question. But it does indicate that hundreds of outwardly separate gambling domains may converge inside the same hosting and routing environment — including domains already relevant to the broader Zentoria story. FinTelegram is continuing to investigate and welcomes additional information from whistleblowers and industry insiders.
FinTelegram has already unmasked Zentoria Limited – a freshly minted Irish “bookmaker” fronted by Mykhaylo Pavlenko and an Alina Vavilova who appears to match the Cyprus‑based Head of Affiliate Program at Russian‑rooted fintech group Quadcode – as the hidden EU paymaster funnelling players’ money into blacklisted NovaForge casinos through the innocent‑sounding “Spinsopotamia.com Dublin” descriptor.
Following our Feb 19, 2026 compliance report on Zentoria Limited and the NovaForge casino network (Robycasino/Spinsy), a whistleblower has provided email documentation indicating that the card billing descriptor “Spinsopotamia.com” is connected to xpate (xpate.com) — a payment services / e-money firm that states it is authorised by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) as an Electronic Money Institution (EMI).