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The Internet Crime

The Dark Web Still Thrives After Silk Road 79

HughPickens.com writes: Russell Berman writes at The Atlantic that the government may have won its case against Silk Road's Ross Ulbricht, but the high-profile trial gave a lot of publicity to the dark web. Both the number of sites and the volume of people using them have increased since Silk Road was shuttered. "Just as on the rest of the internet, users on the dark net are very quick to move on to new things and move away from those products and websites that seem stale and old," says Adam Benson. The cat-and-mouse game between users of the dark web and law enforcement appears to be shifting as well. Newer dark sites (two major ones are Agora and Evolution) are likely to protect their servers by basing them in countries "hostile to U.S. law enforcement," says Nicholas Weaver. "The markets will keep moving overseas, but law enforcement will keep going after the dealers," Weaver says, referring to the people who actually ship and deliver the drugs sold online.

Evolution Marketplace is a much different animal than Silk Road, according to Dan Palumbo. Evolution sells "weapons, stolen credit cards, and more nefarious items that were forbidden on both versions of Silk Road. Silk Road sold a lot of dangerous things, but operators drew the line at their version of 'victimless crimes,' i.e. no child pornography, weapons, or identity theft. Now, four of the top five DarkNet Marketplaces sell weapons while three of the top five sell stolen financial data." This is a darker DarkNet and it speaks to the challenge facing law enforcement as they knock one set of bad actors offline, another comes along with bigger and bolder intentions.
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The Dark Web Still Thrives After Silk Road

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  • Evil Web? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @07:00AM (#49027725)

    When did Dark Web become Evil Web?

    It used to be the the Dark Web was simply those sites that were not being indexed by major search engines. Nothing more, nothing less, just those sites that were not being shown to the average search engine users.

    It did not indicate that the sites were doing something "dodgy" but they were bad at SEO or just had no links going to them. They were undiscoverable.

    • Re:Evil Web? (Score:5, Informative)

      by f3rret ( 1776822 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @07:20AM (#49027775)

      No, you are thinking of the 'deep web'.

      Dark Web has always been the 'secret' side of the 'net. It just used to be more interesting,

      • Dark Web has always been the 'secret' side of the 'net. It just used to be more interesting,

        Not really; we just used to be younger and more impressionable.

        • by f3rret ( 1776822 )

          Dark Web has always been the 'secret' side of the 'net. It just used to be more interesting,

          Not really; we just used to be younger and more impressionable.

          Well "back in the day" as it were, a Dark Net used to require you to basically set up a whole separate network infrastructure inside the World Wide Web, which I think is kinda cooler than the "everybody join in"-way of TOR.

          Those old school darknets also used to be *way* more exclusive.

          • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

            private networks aren't exactly the same thing as dark nets as such.. or is ibm running a "dark net"? by most definitions no.

            • by f3rret ( 1776822 )

              private networks aren't exactly the same thing as dark nets as such.. or is ibm running a "dark net"? by most definitions no.

              Granted, the 'dark' specifier implies a certain degree of secrecy and exclusivity.

  • I can tell everyone with certainty that dark web markerplaces are all bogus and they shouldn't even bother lookimg. You'll just get lots of malware, infested with botnets and get your identity stolen. Here be dragons, abandon all hope ye who enter. Bitcoins are a pyramid scheme and also might carry the measles virus. Basically really nothing to talk about if you know what I mean.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "We sell stolen credit card numbers! To purchase one, simply provide us with your name, credit card number and security code."

    • Although there are exceptions to every rule, this honor among thieves is a rather ridiculous notion.

      At the very least, should you get less than expected purchasing something from someone who steals for a living, you are required to respond with I should have seen that coming.

      Besides, all the really gifted folks who skirt the law for profit make a better living in brokerages and banking.

  • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @07:16AM (#49027765)

    Ulbricht set up a sister site called The Armory at some point which did sell a range of weapons including very dangerous ones like RPG launchers. Silk Road also sold forged IDs and malware (e.g. that could be used to empty bank accounts). His definition of "victimless crime" was a very poorly thought out and inconsistent one.

    • Just the launchers, with no grenades? those aren't dangerous. Legal with a tax stamp in past decades though I don't know about now. Grenades however, that would be a problem.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by TheCarp ( 96830 )

      Well forged IDs are not necessarily used for a crime with a victim, they don't have to be in a real persons name, and if a bank account is all thats opened well. A person using a fake id to rent servers, who pays up front for the service isn't victimizing anyone.

      As for weapons....lol I wonder if any were even sold. I bet that entire darkweb site was just cops buying stuff from cops trying to sting eachother.

      Also, weapons are a persons right to bear, the US constitution recognizes that as a right more fundam

      • Indeed... private party sales of firearms is already a healthy, legal market. It would be stupid to sell them illegally. (Not that people don't do stupid things.)

        Selling anything that requires an FFL, however, is likely to get a lot of attention very quickly, so not likely to be a sustainable business model at all.

        Also Bitcoin sucks for anonymity -- you'd be better off using a prepaid debit card.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I agree! The Constitution says everyone has a right to a gun, or something along those lines.

        So I'm going to give a gun to a three year old child named Joe, who lives next door. It's his constitutional right, according to you. I hope he learns to read soon, so he can read the owner's manual. Then he'll know where the safety is on the gun.

        • by TheCarp ( 96830 )

          Did that actually sound clever or make sense when you posted it? I don't know what more to say other than you clearly don't seem to understand some very basic concepts to such an amazing level I don't even feel I have the time to begin.

  • by invictusvoyd ( 3546069 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @07:20AM (#49027773)
    seems to be the delivery channel . I mean seriously, who would like to recieve a package of contraband delivered !! to an address !!! ... True blue anonymity is still far away ... ( resistance is futile kinda situation for now )
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @07:25AM (#49027791)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Having spent time around members of the criminal class and general "gutter" of society, I'm really not surprised at this. Thoreau said "There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root." You can close down all the venues you want, arrest people and pointlessly make examples of them, but as long as the demand is there, things like the black market, or dark web, or whatever, are going to continue to thrive. Change people's attitudes, and you change their behavior. Unfort
    • by BVis ( 267028 )

      Unfortunately, America has doubled down on draconian punishment

      Yes, much better to put a non-violent drug dealer in jail even though you have to release rapists to do it. (Yes, I know that TDPR was involved in some more "traditional" bad behavior, and I agree with his punishment for those acts.)

      while losing sight of what we're trying to accomplish as a society.

      Nonsense. We're trying to concentrate all wealth and power into the control of a few obscenely wealthy people. In that respect, we're doing great.

    • by Jahoda ( 2715225 )
      what we're trying to accomplish as a society

      Careful now, that sounds suspiciously like the godless language of socialist communism!
  • by coofercat ( 719737 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @08:59AM (#49028011) Homepage Journal

    I recently put my blog on the .onion. You can get to it via the "normal web" via it's .com address, via google searches and whatnot, or you can use a .onion address to get the same stuff. I have to say, it was pathetically simple to set up, and I encourage everyone with a server of their own to do the same. Feel free to upgrade to a Tor relay if you have bandwidth too.

    You may well ask what's the point? Well, my motivation was to see how easy it was, and to increase the amount of content available on the .onion network. I'm pretty sure the only people who've ever visited it are me and one friend of mine, but the fact there's another IP on the internet talking to Tor nodes, and the fact that on very rare occasions those Tor nodes talk back to it makes me feel good.

    If ever I have too much spare time, maybe I'll make a search engine for .onion addresses...? ;-)

    Back on topic: the Silk Road had a restrictions policy (albeit an inconsistent one), but other people have no such qualms. The authorities have succeeded in one sense in that they've fragmented the market, they've also put some additional risk onto the purchaser because it's now less clear how legit the site or vendor are. However, they've enabled someone looking for something minor like a bit of weed to also find all manner of other things. I'm sure someone looking for an RPG would have found one with or without the SR, but someone looking for weed might start thinking "I could also buy an RPG", where they might not have done before. In that sense, shutting down SR was a failure.

    Ultimately, if there's a demand, there'll be supply. Shutting down websites of any kind doesn't alter demand very much, and so there'll always be supply. If the authorities wanted to do anything about this, they'd spend more time working on the demand side of the problem. Sadly, that doesn't have instant results, doesn't get headlines and for every success it has there's a notable failure too.

    • Ultimately, if there's a demand, there'll be supply. Shutting down websites of any kind doesn't alter demand very much, and so there'll always be supply. If the authorities wanted to do anything about this, they'd spend more time working on the demand side of the problem. Sadly, that doesn't have instant results, doesn't get headlines and for every success it has there's a notable failure too.

      For lengthy citation, google the war on drugs. It has much in common with another government performance we refer to as security theatre.

      Whenever a drug kingpin is taken down in Central America, or a corner street dealer comes down with a case of arrested, there is no shortage of applicants for the newly vacated position.

    • Why would you have a .onion domain AND a .com for the same site? It's a bigger risk for your users -- assuming that's why you offer it -- since if they visit your site through .com instead of .onion, their identity is (potentially) exposed.

      That said, relays are nearly pointless (in that they're not the bottleneck of the network), and Tor itself is nearly pointless. Without edge security, it's little more than a feel-good effort that gives a false sense of security. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      There

  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @09:08AM (#49028049)

    Nor will it be around long. James bond gets away with being a well known spy because his writers handle the plot. In real life that just doesn't work,.

  • This is going to be law enforcement's hydra: cut off one head and it's going to grow two more.

    They're going to have to get more clever with how they fight this than the previously have. And that doesn't mean just shutting stuff like Tor and strong encryption down, because they'll also return stronger than they were.
  • I looked into how this can possibly work. Apparently they go to the post office and send their drug shipment with priority mail. WHAT THE HELL?! So spend like $50,000 on one drug sniffing dog at each major USPS hub. Problem solved. Then when those idiots resort to in-person trades, arrest them in sting operations. How has the FBI not figured this out yet?!
    • The problem is, that would be illegal

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S... [wikipedia.org]

      They can not just search mail, does not matter if it is a dog or opening the letter and inspecting it.

    • Re:THE solution (Score:4, Insightful)

      by kilfarsnar ( 561956 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @02:13PM (#49030925)

      I looked into how this can possibly work. Apparently they go to the post office and send their drug shipment with priority mail. WHAT THE HELL?! So spend like $50,000 on one drug sniffing dog at each major USPS hub. Problem solved. Then when those idiots resort to in-person trades, arrest them in sting operations. How has the FBI not figured this out yet?!

      So, what do you do? Rip open every package the dog alerts to? What about the false positives? Would you like to risk having your package destroyed every time you mailed one? Do you realize how much mail goes through the USPS every day? How much do you think inspecting every package would slow things down? Do you know the Constitution only allows searches with a warrant describing the place to be searched and the object of the search? Have I asked enough questions for one reply? How about one more?

      • Not to mention that a single drug-sniffing dog can only operate for a few hours before needing to rest, otherwise the rate of false positives start to go up dramatically.

    • And why should the government be invading people's privacy and locking them up over what substances they want to ingest? Why are you afraid of freedom?
  • Newer dark sites are likely to protect their servers by basing them in countries "hostile to U.S. law enforcement."

    Why does the geek always assume that "keeping our servers in countries hostile to US law enforcement" translates as "we won't mine your data for our own purposes or quietly sell you out to agencies foreign and domestic when the price is right?"

    • by Qzukk ( 229616 )

      I don't know about "the" geek, but I'm curious whether, say, Somalia's government is organized enough to set up a PRISM-level metadata collection scheme across its entire communication infrastructure.

      Personally, though, I assume that the NSA is double-tapping all of the communications in all of the countries outside of the US since they're already tapping all of the communications inside of it.

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