Nefarious profiteers use the encrypted internet to sell stolen data, drugs, and weapons. Facebook and the UN use it to protect dissidents and journalists. This guide shines a light on the Dark Web.
Hacking is a fact of life for businesses and consumers alike. Often, leaked data surfaces and is sold to miscreants–hackers, shady government organizations, and other bad actors–on the Dark Web.
The Dark Web–or dark net, backweb, onionweb–is frequently misunderstood. The network is used by legitimate actors like law enforcement organizations, cryptologists, and journalists as often as by malefactors and criminals.
TechRepublic’s cheat sheet is a routinely updated “living” precis about how the Dark Web works, the content that populates the encrypted internet, and the encryption tools needed to safely navigate the network.
SEE: Ebook: IT leader’s guide to the Dark Web (Tech Pro Research)
SEE: Dark Web activities: 10 signs that you’ve been breached (free PDF) (TechRepublic)
The Dark Web is a network of websites and servers that use encryption to obscure traffic. Dark Web sites require the .onion top level domain, use non-memorable URL strings, and can be accessed only by using the open source, security-focused Tor browser. Because it’s portable and disposable, Tails, a Linux-based operating system that boots from a flash drive, adds a layer of security to Deep Web activity.
Because the tools required to access Dark Web sites help protect user–and server–anonymity, in the past decade the Dark Web has become a magnet for criminal activity. The Silk Road, an eBay-like market for drugs and weapons, famously helped establish the market for peer-to-peer anonymous criminal commerce. The site grabbed mainstream headlines in 2013 when it was taken down by the FBI. In its place rose a number of copycat markets. The negative press, coupled with YouTube horror stories, glued the Dark Web’s reputation to illicit behavior. Today, the Dark Web markets sell drugs, weapons, malicious software, and piles of consumer and sensitive corporate data.
SEE: Data classification policy (Tech Pro Research)
But the Dark Web is not all bad news. ProPublica, a well-respected investigative news organization, has a Dark Web site to help the company securely communicate with sources. The United Nations law enforcement department, the Office on Drugs and Crime, monitors the Dark Web and shares data with the public and global police organizations. Even Facebook, the world’s largest social network, has a Dark Web site relied on by over one million users per month.
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Though the name sounds ominous, the Dark Web did not hatch from some evil hacker lab. The Dark Web is simply a network of websites that require basic encryption technologies to be enabled before users can load content. These are the same technologies that protect passwords when users log on to bank portals and sites like Gmail and Facebook.
For this reason, the Dark Web is used by proponents of privacy and encryption. Organizations as diverse as the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Facebook, the U.S. State Department, and the United Nations all argue vociferously that encryption is a fundamental human right.
The Dark Web is practical. The anonymity and security provided by the encrypted internet means the Dark Web is a haven for criminals, law enforcement agencies, freedom fighters, journalists, neo-capitalists, and curiosity seekers. The Dark Web is unlikely to vanish any time soon.
SEE: Quick glossary: Encryption (Tech Pro Research)
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Using the clearnet generates data. Consumers generate data every time they create a social media account, send a webmail message, or upload a photo from a smartphone. Governments and large corporations generate and oversee billions of records and sensitive files. This makes governments and companies theft targets, and today, data breaches are common.
SEE: The dark web is where hackers buy the tools to subvert elections (CBS News)
Consumers and companies need to be aware that sensitive records are bought and sold routinely in anonymous markets. If you’ve been part of a corporate or government hack, your data is on the Dark Web.
The Dark Web is also a small haven for terrorists and organized crime. Most Dark Web-focused security firms, however, caution against exaggerating the size of, and the risks posed by, the encrypted internet. Global law enforcement is aware of, operates on, and works to combat illicit Dark Web activity.
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The best way to access the Dark Web is with Tor. An acronym for the onion router, Tor is an open source protocol and suite of plugins built on top of Mozilla’s Firefox web browser. Tor helps anonymize the source and destination of web traffic by passing the machine’s IP address through a network of similarly encrypted IP addresses. The result is that web browsing slows down a bit as each request is bounced around the world, obfuscating user traffic.
SEE: All of TechRepublic’s cheat sheets and smart person’s guides
For additional security, power users and experts also use anonymity-protecting operating systems like Tails. Tails is a Linux distribution that specializes in security and convenience. The operating system takes about 20 minutes to install on a flash drive and can be booted from the USB drive on nearly any machine in the world. Tails comes preconfigured with Tor and offers dozens of other security features.
There is no guarantee of privacy on the Dark Web. Tor recently warned users not to expect complete end-to-end privacy while using the network.
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SEE: Quick glossary: Malware (Tech Pro Research)
Novices and experts should exercise care and caution when visiting the Dark Web. TechRepublic does not condone illegal activity or unethical activity. Offensive material can sometimes be just a click away. Browse at your own risk. Never break the law. Use the Dark Web safely, and for legal purposes only.
