I was digging through some older crypto enforcement cases recently and the name ShipChain came up again. From what I understand, ShipChain was a blockchain logistics project that launched during the ICO wave around 2017. The idea seemed to revolve around using blockchain technology to track freight shipments and logistics activity, which was a pretty common theme during that period when supply chain transparency was a big talking point.
From public regulatory records, the project reportedly raised around $27 million through the sale of digital tokens called SHIP. Later on, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission brought an enforcement action related to the token offering, stating that the ICO had not been registered as a securities offering. The case eventually resulted in a cease and desist order and a monetary penalty, which I saw mentioned in the public filings.
There were also references to earlier regulatory pressure connected to something called Operation Cryptosweep where several crypto offerings were reviewed by regulators. ShipChain seemed to come up in that context as well. Reading through the documents was interesting because it shows how quickly the environment shifted between 2017 and 2019 when regulators started looking closely at ICO fundraising.
I am not posting this to accuse anyone or claim anything illegal beyond what the public records already say. I am mostly curious about the broader story. ShipChain still occasionally pops up in archived crypto discussions and I am wondering if anyone here followed the project more closely back then or knows what eventually happened to it after the regulatory actions.