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The Internet The Almighty Buck Technology

After Silk Road 2.0 Bust, Eyes Turn To 'Untouchable' Decentralized Market 108

apexcp sends this article from The Daily Dot: Following a wave of Dark Net arrests that brought down the famous anonymous drug market Silk Road 2.0, all eyes have turned to a marketplace called OpenBazaar that is designed to be impossible to shut down. Described as the "next generation of uncensored trade" and a "safe untouchable marketplace," OpenBazaar is fundamentally different from all the online black markets that have come before it, because it is completely decentralized. If authorities acted against OpenBazaar users, they could arrest individuals, but the network would survive. "If you're thinking about OpenBazaar as Silk Road 3.0, you're thinking about it much too narrowly," said OpenBazaar operations lead Sam Patterson in an interview last night. "I actually think it's much more powerful as eCommerce 2.0."
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After Silk Road 2.0 Bust, Eyes Turn To 'Untouchable' Decentralized Market

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  • You're connecting directly to people's IP addresses! For fuck's sake, guys! Are you even trying to make it anonymous anymore?
    • by elephantdog ( 3868945 ) on Friday November 07, 2014 @11:21AM (#48333805)
      you haven't read anything about it have you? it'll have the option of running over TOR, plus most of the items sold will be legal items, nothing illegal about selling something to someone, it's just Ebay without the company charging you fees
      • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
        Cos, you know, TOR is so anonymous...
        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          Do you have any evidence, any at all that a TOR user's anonymity has ever been compromised due to a vulnerability specific to TOR?

          To my knowledge ever document case of someone being discovered that used TOR was because of something they said or did, some type of malware on there machine, or a user-agent that was leaky about identifying information.

          I am not saying TOR has not been compromised, we know of the malware injection done by some exit node operations for example, but assuming you are being smart, us

          • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Friday November 07, 2014 @01:48PM (#48335023)

            This is why the Gentle User cannot have nice things.

            Tor must be implemented with precision. The steps are involved because the theory is involved. Some of the better, well-informed and technically savvy users have been busted [techdirt.com].

            I am an IT professional and I am not at all comfortable that I could use Tor and guarantee my own anonymity.

            I advise people against using Tor in hopes that they will be able to surf without discovery because it can give a false sense of freedom to do as one wishes.

            • There are simply too many moving parts to the usable Internet (the WWW). Everything from the browser to the DNS request can be compromised. And the browser itself is complex, speaking at a minimum of three languages (HTML, CSSx, Javascript) which, even if one or two are disabled, may still leak information.

              And then, let's talk operating system. Unless your OS air gapped, it probably has holes in it that are exploitable. In fact, anything that interfaces with the network will potentially have exploitable hol

            • I'm a Gentile User, you insensitive clod!
          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            TOR users are busted regularly, because the default settings in the TBB are not secure. Makes you wonder why. Has anyone who has hardened the TBB been busted? Thanks to parallel construction we'll never know.

            We do know that .onion servers are thoroughly insecure, with many cycles of bust, "oops", patch. Makes you wonder why. Is Wikileaks back up on TOR yet?

            We know the NSA can de-anonymise TOR, but it's difficult for them and they can only target specific users, and not from stored data (or so the leaks

          • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

            Tor is NOT secure. Their own developers have admitted as such, and from oh, May this year articles have popped up pretty much fucking everywhere about MITM attacks from the NSA and hidden service exploits coming from the FBI; if you think that's secure, well, good luck to you,.

      • TOR does nothing. Anyone can run an exit node. Anyone can track your shit back to the IP you entered TOR with. The government operates many TOR exit nodes.

        "We sell legal things too!!1111!!" is about as salient a point as "But what if I use Bittorrent to download Linux ISOs?!?!111" or "But The Pirate Bay doesn't host content!!!". It doesn't stop the people doing illegal things from being busted. It doesn't stop the ISPs, governments, etc. from attacking the service as a whole. It doesn't stop people fr

        • There's enough coffee shops, fast-food places, hotels and many other "free wi-fi!" options for users to be secure enough for general things. I mean, if you're comparing 'terrorists plotting to blow up the white house', with 'folks looking at porn', big priority difference. What you outlined would be required for a terrorist to plot to blow up the white house.
          • Unless that terrorist decided to just hop the fence one day.

            As for free wi-fi, you'd need to find a new hot spot each time you connected. Away from your house.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      You're connecting directly to people's IP addresses! For fuck's sake, guys! Are you even trying to make it anonymous anymore?

      Sweet pickles. From the fucking article:

      OpenBazaar is open-source software that runs a peer-to-peer network that can be used with the Tor anonymizing network.

      With OpenBazaar, everyone hosts their own store and connectsâ"anonymously if they so chooseâ"to a larger ecosystem,

    • Presumably the connections to IPs happen through TOR.

  • Since it's decentralized, they'll have to go after the actual users. Maybe throw some of them in jail. And since the network will survive, they can generate a steady stream of arrests, rather than shutting down the network and having to find out where all the users have buggered off to.
    • by elephantdog ( 3868945 ) on Friday November 07, 2014 @11:23AM (#48333815)
      not all users will be breaking the law, the first item sold on it was Honey, I plan to buy and sell completely legal items on there, I'm not a fan of ebay and their fees, or their rules, like "no food" etc, a lot of perfectly legal items that I can sell on the street legally can't be sold on Ebay
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Funny you mention honey and that many items can be legally sold.
         
        I know in my state it's illegal to sell food items without having proper licenses.
         
        Meaning if you package it yourself you better have your health inspection certs.

      • Federal prosecutors in February accused two of the biggest US honey processors - Honey Solutions of Texas and Groeb Farms Inc of Michigan - of buying illegal Chinese imports of the product in order to avoid being assessed tens of millions of dollars under the anti-dumping duties. The companies were fined a total of $3 million but, under deferred-prosecution agreements, won't face further penalties if they don't repeat the conduct alleged.

        Also charged were five individuals, including four US honey brokers, w

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        Hi you fucking "I just registered an account to spam on this very topic" shill.

        Protip: Those of us that have been here a LONG while get to see your entire history and details for free.

        You registered an account specifically to talk about this exact subject.

        Go the fuck home, shill.

    • Since it's decentralized, they'll have to go after the actual users.....

      ... or the developers. I'm not sure OpenBazaar is going to win this one. The way to gain immunity is to build tools that genuinely have large amounts of legitimate usage, large enough that attempts to blanket ban the whole thing are seen as unacceptable.

      The amount of trading on these black markets is huge. Meanwhile, demand for a pure p2p trading marketplace is probably rather low. It would be very easy for OpenBazaar to be overwhelmed

  • I'll wait for silk road 4.0

  • by sirwired ( 27582 ) on Friday November 07, 2014 @11:28AM (#48333859)

    This is missing one of Silk Road's major features of "washing" your BitCoins through a central pool. Without the laundering facilities available, it becomes a lot easier to track sellers down.

    I suppose a decentralized eBay-ish thing could be handy, but without the money laundering, it's a lot less useful.

    • dark wallet will be integrated, I'll be using the open bazaar for legal transactions, selling to people without asking ebay for permission and having to use that paypal crap
    • I don't see why that can't be a completely separate service. It should be perfectly legal to trade one coin for another, and it is legal to value your privacy. Suspicious, perhaps, given that everyone's been giving up all their personal info left and right, but legal. Am I wrong?

      • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Friday November 07, 2014 @01:36PM (#48334921) Journal

        People give up their liberties when government cries "ILLEGAL". The problem is, there is no crime between two willing people.

        • by chihowa ( 366380 ) *

          The problem is, there is no crime between two willing people.

          That's a bit of an oversimplification. There's a whole class of crimes that involve willing, if misinformed or deceived, people: fraud.

          And while the definition of "willing" is debatable, the impact of consent is also subject to reasonable (IMHO) constraints, as with minors or people of otherwise diminished capacity (drugged, intoxicated, or mentally retarded). Once you start accounting for the nuances of reality, your maxim doesn't have quite the same truthy ring to it anymore.

        • by thrig ( 36791 )

          A businessman and governor can certainly come to some sort of mutually willing and beneficial agreement regarding the management of, say, coal fly ash on the property of said business, perhaps in the area of how well all those expensive regulations and inspections are carried out, and Governor Pat McCrory did work for Duke Energy all those years. Oh, your downstream water is now a little polluted? Whoops, tee-hee! No crime, just two willing folks who came to an understanding, uh-huh.

  • scary part... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by TheCarp ( 96830 ) <sjc.carpanet@net> on Friday November 07, 2014 @11:32AM (#48333887) Homepage

    This looks great in concept but, having everyone run it on their own machines and host their own store means encouraging lots of people to be vulnerable to every security issue that comes along. Oops one remote exploit and anyone's anonymity can be compromised.

    Now, I am not fool, I realize that many of the bigger players will take more steps will protect themselves with dedicated servers rented under false identities etc....but the vast majority are being encouraged to leave themselves exposed to every vulnerablity that comes along because they don't have the sophistication to play the game that they are being encouraged to play.

    This is one of the reasons I really liked the concept of freenet....sure everyone is hosting but, there is author anonimty beyond simply "you can't find my IP", there is actual separation between hosted data and how it is published.

    Of course, I haven't tried it in years but, the problem always more seemed to be speed than anything since it is funadamentally a storage and retrieval mechanism and not a transport layer.

  • by Sir_Eptishous ( 873977 ) on Friday November 07, 2014 @11:34AM (#48333911)
    After watching the video with the guy from OpenBazaar, and from things I've read lately about where capitalism is going, I have to wonder, where is the end game in all this?

    AirBnB threatens the hotel/motel paradigm, Lift and Uber threaten taxis, now OpenBazaar threatens online commerce, bitcoin, etc;
    These new services appear to be starting a crack, albeit a small one, in the current model of how money is made and by who.
    • by AltGrendel ( 175092 ) <(su.0tixe) (ta) (todhsals-ga)> on Friday November 07, 2014 @11:39AM (#48333939) Homepage
      I don't thing there's going to be any kind of fundamental change in capitalism. The only thing that's going to change is the method and who gets to benefit from it.
      • by silfen ( 3720385 ) on Friday November 07, 2014 @12:12PM (#48334233)

        I don't thing there's going to be any kind of fundamental change in capitalism.

        Well, there is a change in the sense that these businesses make rent seeking harder. That is, it forces companies to compete in the market (true capitalism) vs running to government to ask for handouts or favorable treatment (crony "capitalism").

      • by Anonymous Coward

        We have a winner!!! The founders of Ebay, and millions of other companies got rich and became the "capitalists" from nothing. This idea that there are a bunch of men in suits somewhere that determine "capitalism" is the reason why ignorant people hate capitalism. They don't understand that the very idea of capitalism is that anyone that does something better/cheaper/whatever than everyone else wins. This doesn't fly in the face of capitalism, it IS capitalism. If you can't find the end game for anyone run

        • government sponsored capitalism and unbounded individual capitalism are the only types i hate. capitalism as an idea is great but the current system could use some work.
          • Thank you. Recognize it as an unparalleled engine of invention and wealth creation for the average person, that perhaps needs some government action for rough edges, like pollution or a safety net for sudden Jon loss.

        • by radl33t ( 900691 )
          capitalism isn't most of those things. its simply about privately own capital and production seeking profits. that's it. the false ideals you attribute it are the reason why ignorant people love "capitalism."
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Politics is about inserting yourself in the way of capitalism, AKA economic freedom, to get paid somehow to get back out of the way.

          The first principle is freedom, and it is still way too easy for fraudulent reasons such as "there is only room for one cable company in this city", or 5000 cabs, or one ferry boat company, or private parking near an airport needs a 30% tax because they take business away from the inefficient, on-site government parking lot.

          ENOUGH. Time for freedom

      • I don't thing there's going to be any kind of fundamental change in capitalism. The only thing that's going to change is the method and who gets to benefit from it.

        I disagree.

        Wikileaks was effectively stopped when all credit card companies refused service. Defense distributed lost their payment processor ("Stripe").

        The TOS for many online resellers restrict what you can and cannot sell - eBay won't let you sell booze or their empty, collectible containers [ebay.com], animals, or event tickets. (Why can't I resell my event ticket if I decide I'm not going to use it?) Amazon, even Craigslist have similar restrictions. You can't sell fart apps on the apple store.

        This will also put

        • I'm pretty sure you're under-estimating the effect that secure untraceable commerce would have on the world.

          That is a great point, and it appears to be an under-appreciated view of how things are developing.

  • by Chas ( 5144 ) on Friday November 07, 2014 @11:50AM (#48334029) Homepage Journal

    Seriously, if you're running across someone else's network and/or on someone else's hardware, you can't keep this anonymous.

    Even if you're running on your OWN hardware, you still have to interconnect. And there just isn't a good, reliable way to remain anonymous.

    If someone can get in and see your wares, the feds can as well. At which point, you take up residence in FPMITA prison and they liquidate your life for cash.

  • A decentralized free market like that is good for many reasons. The way to get something like that established is to focus on uncontroversial business. If it primarily becomes a tool for illegal dealings, merely having the software on your computer might be construed by courts as evidence of illegal activity.

    • by Nyder ( 754090 )

      A decentralized free market like that is good for many reasons. The way to get something like that established is to focus on uncontroversial business. If it primarily becomes a tool for illegal dealings, merely having the software on your computer might be construed by courts as evidence of illegal activity.

      Yep, that same way having an unregistered gun means you are a murder.

      • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

        no, it's even more basic than that; it's the fact of having a penis makes you a rapist.

        (you might not even be aware that such software is even installed on your computer...)

      • by silfen ( 3720385 )

        Yep, that same way having an unregistered gun means you are a murder.

        You know, with idiots like you attacking people who are actually pro-liberty and think that the current state of affair sucks, it is hardly surprising that we aren't making any progress.

        In different words, if you want to know why having an unregistered gun gets people in trouble, it's because people like you like to whine and complain instead of figuring out smart strategies for doing something about it.

  • It seems like OpenBazaar is off to a good start, but there is still a long way to go before users can use it with confidence. Some issues I can think of that the current implementation doesn't yet solve

    Privacy/viewability of content between "open" nodes and "darknet" nodes. If OpenBazaar is to be equally for people selling homemade handicrafts and those who want to sell or trade in substances their governments find illicit, its going to be a big issue to have both of them displayed side by side. How do yo

    • > but Bitcoin doesn't have any sort of "chargeback" system.

      The first Silk Road solved this problem by "escrowing" bitcoin payments. Drug buyer sent funds to the Silk Road, who held them until the buyer got his goods and was satisfied. When he posted a positive review/reputation score, the funds were released to the seller. With the distributed "OpenBazaar" system, you just need neutral third parties to supply the escrow service.

  • ... Tor isn't a big help here.

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