The biggest Dark Web takedown yet sends black markets reeling
Andy Greenberg
Wired
July 14th, 2017
Read the full story here.
Andy Greenberg
Wired
July 14th, 2017
Not since the days of the now-legendary Silk Road has a single site dominated the dark web's black market as completely, and for as long, as the online bazaar known as AlphaBay. And with the news that the site has been torn down by a law enforcement raid—and one of its leaders found dead in a Thai prison—the dark web drug trade has fallen into a temporary state of chaos.
About a week ago AlphaBay, the dark web's largest contraband marketplace, went mysteriously offline. Rumors swirled that it had run off with its customers' money, or was down for maintenance. Then on Thursday, the Wall Street Journal reported that a law enforcement operation spanning threes countries shuttered the site, with Canadian police seizing its servers in Quebec, and US officials seeking the extradition of one of its alleged administrators, Alexandre Cazes, to the United States. Cazes was later found hanging in a Bangkok jail cell in an apparent suicide.
Details around the AlphaBay takedown remain murky. But the news that authorities had permanently wiped it off the web has sent its buyers and sellers scrambling to other outlets for their business, particularly the site's booming trade in narcotics. So far, they've found mostly inhospitable, unstable alternatives.
"It’s been really chaotic," says Nicolas Christin, a professor of computer science and public policy at Carnegie Mellon who has closely tracked the darknet for years. He points to AlphaBay's unprecedented size for a darknet market, estimating that its nearly 300,000 listings of drugs, stolen credit cards, and other contraband brought in—as a conservative estimate—between $600,000 and $800,000 a day in revenue. "When you have a site like AlphaBay going down, it puts a lot of stress on the other players. It’s stress-testing their infrastructures."
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