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re: Dark Web?

Posted on 11/4/15 at 5:16 pm to
Posted by cas4t
Member since Jan 2010
70901 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 5:16 pm to
Ooh link? I thought I'd read a lot about that guy but it was all just kinda like "and this is where he went to colleg" type of info.
Posted by HempHead
Big Sky Country
Member since Mar 2011
55446 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 5:20 pm to
Just google Ross Ulbricht.
Posted by AHCOO
Somewhere Texas
Member since Sep 2015
455 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 5:20 pm to
What was the original intent of the dark web/ deep web... Whatever it is..
Posted by AHCOO
Somewhere Texas
Member since Sep 2015
455 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 5:22 pm to
Thanks man will do
Posted by ehole
in a house
Member since Nov 2010
3373 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 6:57 pm to
quote:

What was the original intent of the dark web/ deep web... Whatever it is..


Spy type shite... Thank naval intelligence for it
Posted by Pigfeet
Ark Mods are Fascists
Member since Mar 2010
19783 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 7:05 pm to
quote:

Only go to the dark web if you're in need of human organs or drugs.

Or a sex slave.


and hitmen
Posted by Asharad
Tiamat
Member since Dec 2010
5693 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 9:56 pm to
An FBI operation designed to lure criminals into their net.
Posted by 3nOut
Central Texas, TX
Member since Jan 2013
28876 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 10:06 pm to
Non-indexed web.

I 99% of the web you know covered in port 80 and port 443. Some people wanted web that wasn't traceable over those ports so they went down Tor and other protocols.
TOR got big for 2 reasons. Kids using it to get around schools' web filters and places like China that restrict public internet.

From that we got an underground web and uses different ports and protocols than our normal Chrome or Safari use to browse.
Posted by AHCOO
Somewhere Texas
Member since Sep 2015
455 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 11:37 pm to
If it's so bad why not just terminate the deep web period?
Posted by 3nOut
Central Texas, TX
Member since Jan 2013
28876 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 11:46 pm to
You take charge of killing all 65000 ports out there brah. And hunting down everybody hosting a server that's not using port 80 and 443. Good luck.
Posted by amitch11
Upstate SC
Member since Jan 2014
34 posts
Posted on 11/4/15 at 11:55 pm to
Hemp - too much Criminal Minds
Posted by HempHead
Big Sky Country
Member since Mar 2011
55446 posts
Posted on 11/5/15 at 12:12 am to
quote:

Hemp - too much Nietzsche

Posted by LanierSpots
Sarasota, Florida
Member since Sep 2010
61635 posts
Posted on 11/5/15 at 6:18 am to
quote:

Dark Web?


Do you even "House of Cards" bro?
Posted by AHCOO
Somewhere Texas
Member since Sep 2015
455 posts
Posted on 11/5/15 at 7:02 am to
No not really.. Don't have a lot of time to watch tv shows
Posted by AHCOO
Somewhere Texas
Member since Sep 2015
455 posts
Posted on 11/5/15 at 7:03 am to
Sounds complicated
Posted by PJinAtl
Atlanta
Member since Nov 2007
12747 posts
Posted on 11/5/15 at 7:06 am to
quote:

What was the original intent of the dark web/ deep web... Whatever it is..
There was actually an article in Rolling Stone about the Darknet/deepweb a week or two ago.

Deep web is anything that can't be directly accessed or index by search engines. Anything behind pay walls (Netflix), password protected sites (email/webmail) or where information is stored in searchable databases.

Darknet is a portion of the deep web in that it cannot be found by search engines. However, as others have said, these servers do not work on the standard ports and are done to increase the level of privacy. The Tor browser actually started as a project of the U.S Naval Research Lab, as a means to communicate securely online. The developers knew that if it was kept strictly military, people would know that the traffic was government related. So, they released Tor as a publicly accessible/open source product. This way traffic would be a mixture of government communications and public users and it would be more difficult to tell which was which.

The other key to the privacy is that connections are not direct. On a regular browser, your computer connects to your ISP, and requests information from a server (say TD). The server responds, sending information back through your ISP and to your computer. Tor requests are routed through multiple computers in multiple areas, so it is difficult, if not impossible, to tell what country the end user is in, much less a more specific location.
Posted by AHCOO
Somewhere Texas
Member since Sep 2015
455 posts
Posted on 11/5/15 at 7:20 am to
Wow! Sounds very complicated but I understand alittle bit of how it works. I guess this is why there is bunch of sights dedicated to illegal activity, because it's very difficult to stop.
Posted by AHCOO
Somewhere Texas
Member since Sep 2015
455 posts
Posted on 11/5/15 at 7:22 am to
Did they ever bring back that 50 page thread on it, the one that got deleted? From what I read on the other threads I found on google that seemed like the best one.
Posted by Cheese Grits
Wherever I lay my hat is my home
Member since Apr 2012
54655 posts
Posted on 11/5/15 at 7:28 am to
#BlackInternetMatters
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