Deccan Chronicle

Websites help drug dealers find customers

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

Silk Road, the drug peddling website in the darknet, was shut down following a bust by FBI in 2013. But with its closure, the plot of the ever-growing darknet drug market just thickened.

Dozens of clones of the website sprang up in deep web. Modelled on Amazon and eBay, these websites were well-organised community marketplac­es, complete with profiles, listings, and transactio­n reviews. There is one major difference: Everything was anonymous on the site.

These websites don’t show up on regular search engines. To access the darknet, one needs special search skills.

Combining an anonymous interface with traceless payments in the digital currency bitcoin, the sites allow thousands of drug dealers and nearly 10 lakh worldwide customers to find each other.

The first Silk Road was active from 2011 to 2013. According to the FBI, Silk Road managed a business of more than $1 billion in sales. It had multiple drug categories with 13,000 listings from sellers. After the FBI bust, site founder Ross Ulbricht from Texas, USA was arrested.

The marketplac­e crashed but the widely publicised case made the website’s name even more famous. Within a few months, new websites started appearing in the darknet.

Not many Indians figured in the list of Silk Road users which the FBI revealed in 2013. Two years later, Calvin and a few others from India started using the second generation Silk Road. Excise officials suspect Calvin must have paid with bitcoins.

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