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'The criminals can run, but they can't hide': authorities worldwide target online bla

poledriver

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'The criminals can run, but they can't hide': authorities worldwide target online black markets

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US and European law enforcement agencies have announced the largest strike ever against the internet's thriving black markets, shutting down more than 400 sites and arresting 17 people for allegedly selling drugs, weapons and illegal services to anonymous buyers worldwide.

The sweep of the crackdown marked a new level of aggressiveness and coordination by Western governments determined to police shadowy corners of the internet. Government evidence showed the shuttered sites were offering a remarkable range of illicit goods, from cocaine to counterfeit money to explosives.

We can now show that they are neither invisible nor untouchable. The criminals can run, but they can't hide. And our work continues.

Troels Oerting, head of the European Cybercrime Centre
Many once thought this trade was beyond the reach of police because the sites were accessible only through Tor, a service originally created by the US government that directs internet traffic through a succession of routers to hide the identities of users and the locations of servers. The ability of investigators to unmask the alleged operators of Tor sites sent shivers through those who use the service for more legitimate purposes, such as political activists, journalists and diplomats.

Several experts suggested that Tor's ability to protect users and the locations of servers may have been compromised on a mass scale by sophisticated technological tools used by a coalition of Western law-enforcement agencies that has been targeting what's often called "The Dark Web".

"There are no guarantees of anonymity," said Steve Bellovin, a Columbia University computer science professor. "It's clear that buying [illicit goods] on something like Tor is not as safe as people thought a year ago."

The strike on the Dark Web - code named "Operation Onymous", a word meaning the opposite of anonymous - began Wednesday with the arrest of a San Francisco man, Blake Benthall, 26, for allegedly starting an illicit online marketplace called Silk Road 2.0. That site began operations a year ago, one month after the US Federal Bureau of Investigation shut down a predecessor, called the Silk Road. He was charged with several felonies that could lead to lifelong imprisonment.

The action spread internationally on Thursday and Friday as authorities in the United States and 16 European nations shut down 410 sites that were reachable through Tor and allowed anonymous transactions, typically using virtual currencies, such as Bitcoin, that were difficult for police to track. Police seized Bitcoins worth $1 million and $224,000 worth of Euros, along with drugs, gold and silver, authorities said.

"It is a plain fact that criminals use advanced technology to commit their crimes and conceal evidence - and they hide behind international borders so they can stymie law enforcement," said US Assistant Attorney-General Leslie Caldwell in a statement. "But the global law-enforcement community has innovated and collaborated to disrupt these 'dark market' websites, no matter how sophisticated or far-flung they have become."

The sites, with names such as "Hackintosh" and "Pablo Escobar Drug Store", were found in England, Germany, France, Bulgaria, Spain and Switzerland, among other nations, according to Europol, the European Union's law-enforcement agency.

"We are not 'just' removing these services from the open internet; this time, we have also hit services on the Darknet using Tor where, for a long time, criminals have considered themselves beyond reach," said Troels Oerting, head of the European Cybercrime Centre, part of Europol. "We can now show that they are neither invisible nor untouchable. The criminals can run, but they can't hide. And our work continues."

Tor - a name that began as an acronym for "The Onion Router" because it wrapped internet traffic in protective layers of encryption to hide a user's identity - was developed by the US Naval Research Laboratory and is run by a nonprofit group that receives US State Department funding.

It is popular among privacy activists despite its limitations. A planned talk at a security conference earlier this year, by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, was slated to reveal ways that attackers could identify Tor users - a process called "de-anonymisation." The talk was abruptly canceled, raising suspicions that the techniques were unexpectedly sensitive.

That incident generated considerable discussion in the online privacy and security community on Friday as news of the crackdown spread. Yet many experts said the takedown may have been unrelated to the Carnegie Mellon de-anonymisation techniques because there are numerous ways to potentially target illegal sites on Tor, including some traditional ones such as recruiting informants.

Andrew Lewman, executive director of the Tor Project, which runs the service, said in an email that it does not condone its use for illegal purposes and that it was unclear how authorities discovered the operators of the illicit sites. "We don't have any more information. It seems old fashioned police work continues to work well," he said. "Until we have more details, we cannot speculate any further."

The investigation took at least two years, said individuals familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak freely. The actual takedown of the illicit sites was highly coordinated and took place within one hour.

Court orders and search warrants had to be coordinated. Key alleged operators, such as Benthall, had to be in custody. Anyone going to one of the actual sites will now see a message saying the site was seized by the Us government or the relevant law-enforcement agency in that country.

Rodney Joffe, a senior vice president of Neustar, a data analytics firm in Northern Virginia, said, "This is a big deal. They just hit a large number of bad guys internationally who thought they were operating below the radar. What it does is send a really big message that operating on the Dark Web isn't a guarantee of your staying out of sight. They all thought this was a new domain where, 'We can operate for many years without anyone going after us.' They just learned that's not the case."

Cont -

http://www.theage.com.au/technology...get-online-black-markets-20141109-11jaba.html
 
Myeaaah they took down a bunch of these darkweb sites but I already know of at least one that wasn't... They can keep doing this but someone else will always fill the hole in the market again and start a new and improved "webshop".
 
These idiots just won't take a hint. It's like they are addicted to this shit.

The adrenaline rush of catching "the bad guy" has made these "cops" physically dependent. And if they don't get their fix, innocent people start dying from irrationally violent raids in the middle of the night.

What a perverted and hypocritical state, these pathetic human beings have allowed themselves to devolve into.

They are fucking delirious if they truly believe that they are in control.
 
I really believe the movement will continue with bigger and better webshops... these law enforcement officials are a joke thinking they are making some huge difference for the "public good". I'm interested and anxious to see which new sites pop up next. If anyone has any info on any, <no solicitation of sources> I'd really like to see the movement progress further, solely for observational purposes of course.
 
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"They can run but they can't hide" weird cuz I always used to hide it from cops instead of doing drugs in front of them and tryna run away
 
^and a very good point indeed! I feel truly sorry for those who make the mistake of doing otherwise.
 
Ironically, these dealers are, in fact, hiding better and running less than their traditional counterparts.
 
Skid row dealers still make their $. Glad to see we're just targeting middle America now.

Next we'll be busting all celebrities and politicians.
 
Stil waiting for how many child porn sites they shut down. My guess is zero.
 
Stil waiting for how many child porn sites they shut down. My guess is zero.
This is a damn good fucking point. They so worried about catching the big drug vendors but who knows how much child porn is out there that they aren't worried about.
 
This is a damn good fucking point. They so worried about catching the big drug vendors but who knows how much child porn is out there that they aren't worried about.

Child Pornography was so early to mid 2000's
 
Fuck the feds and the lobbies. We'll see who's laughing when the tide turns in a year.
 
Yeah, really, imagine if they put the cash and energy into busting Pedos that they do into fighting the drug war.

(Yeah, but it's drugs, an drugs are bad, M'kay? )

Maybe they believe drugs are the gateway drugs to pedophilia?
 
They won't succeed in stopping them all, but what concerns me is that they can use the forever-war concept to endlessly fund agencies like this.

They'll do anything to keep law enforcement budgets bloated and unreasonable, and keep making laws that oppress freedom in the name of security.
 
Stil waiting for how many child porn sites they shut down. My guess is zero.
This ....

They won't succeed in stopping them all, but what concerns me is that they can use the forever-war concept to endlessly fund agencies like this.

They'll do anything to keep law enforcement budgets bloated and unreasonable, and keep making laws that oppress freedom in the name of security.
And this.
The world we live in is so ass backwards.
 
And don't forget about the modern day private prison profiteer lobbiests who lobby politicians to beef up drug laws so they can make more money per unit incarcerated and when the jobs start coming back from China they will need lots of prisoners to fill those job positions with low pay prison labour.

See, lots of people in cages is good for the(ir) future economy!
 
Hackneyed threat is hackneyed. In fact, I'd reckon it's the opposite: They can't run, because they have to man their servers somehow. Hide is all they can do.
 
Hackneyed threat is hackneyed. In fact, I'd reckon it's the opposite: They can't run, because they have to man their servers somehow. Hide is all they can do.
What do you mean "man the servers"?

Once you have rented servers from people, you can move around where you fill orders from. Highly mobile.
 
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