The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Illuminati­ng the ‘dark web’

- By Robert Gehl

In the wake of recent violent events in the U.S., many people are expressing concern about the tone and content of online communicat­ions, including talk of the “dark web.” Despite the sinister-sounding phrase, there is not just one “dark web.” The term is actually fairly technical in origin, and is often used to describe some of the lesserknow­n corners of the internet. The online services that make up what has become called the “dark web” have been evolving since the early days of the commercial internet — but because of their technologi­cal difference­s, are not well understood.

As a result, people often think of the dark web as a place where people sell drugs or exchange stolen informatio­n — or as some section of the internet Google can’t crawl. It’s both, and neither, and much more.

In brief, dark websites are just like any other website, containing whatever informatio­n its owners want to provide, and built with standard web technologi­es, like hosting software, HTML and JavaScript. Dark websites can be viewed by a standard web browser like Firefox or Chrome. The difference is that they can only be accessed through special networkrou­ting software, which is designed to provide anonymity for both visitors to websites and publishers of these sites.

Websites on the dark web don’t end in “.com” or “.org” or other more common web address endings; they more often include long strings of letters and numbers, ending in “.onion” or “.i2p.” Those are signals that tell software like Freenet, I2P or Tor how to find dark websites while keeping users’ and hosts’ identities private.

Those programs got their start a couple of decades ago. In 1999, Irish computer scientist Ian Clarke started Freenet as a peer-to-peer system for computers to distribute various types of data in a decentrali­zed manner rather than through the more centralize­d structure of the mainstream internet. The structure of Freenet separates the identity of the creator from its content, which made it attractive for people who wanted to host anonymous websites.

Not long after Freenet began, the Tor Project and the Invisible Internet Project developed their own distinct methods for anonymousl­y hosting websites.

Today, the more commonly used internet has billions of websites — but the dark web is tiny, with tens of thousands of sites at the most, at least according to the various indexes and search engines that crawl these three networks.

The most commonly used of the three anonymous systems is Tor — which is so prominent that mainstream websites like Facebook, The New York Times and The Washington Post operate versions of their websites accessible on Tor’s network. Obviously, those sites don’t seek to keep their identities secret, but they have piggybacke­d on Tor’s anonymizin­g web technology in order to allow users to connect privately and securely without government­s knowing.

In addition, Tor’s system is set up to allow users to anonymousl­y browse not only dark websites, but also regular websites. Using Tor to access the regular internet privately is much more common than using it to browse the dark web.

Given the often sensationa­lized media coverage of the dark web, it’s understand­able that people think “dark” is a moral judgment. Hitmen for hire, terrorist propaganda, child traffickin­g and exploitati­on, guns, drugs and stolen informatio­n markets do sound pretty dark.

Yet people commit crimes throughout the internet with some regularity. One of the activities often associated with the dark web, terrorist propaganda, is far more prevalent on the regular web.

Defining the dark web only by the bad things that happen there ignores the innovative search engines and privacycon­scious social networking — as well as important blogging by political dissidents.

Even complainin­g that dark web informatio­n isn’t indexed by search engines misses the crucial reality that search engines never see huge swaths of the regular internet either — such as email traffic, online gaming, streaming video services, documents shared within corporatio­ns or on data-sharing services like Dropbox. Ultimately, though, the dark web is indeed searchable.

Thus, I suggest, a more accurate connotatio­n of “dark” in “dark web” is found in the phrase “going dark” — moving communicat­ions out of clear and public channels and into encrypted or more private ones.

Focusing all this fear and moral judgment on the dark web risks both needlessly scaring people about online safety and erroneousl­y reassuring them about online safety.

For instance, the financial services company Experian sells services that purport to “monitor the dark web” to alert customers when their personal data has been compromise­d by hackers and offered for sale online. Yet to sign up for that service, customers have to give the company all sorts of personal informatio­n — including their Social Security number and email address — the very data they’re seeking to protect. And they have to hope that Experian doesn’t get hacked, as its competitor Equifax was, compromisi­ng the personal data of nearly every adult in the U.S.

It’s inaccurate to assume that online crime is based on the dark web — or that the only activity on the dark web is dangerous and illegal. It’s also inaccurate to see the dark web as content beyond the reach of search engines. Acting on these incorrect assumption­s would encourage government­s and corporatio­ns to want to monitor and police online activity — and risk giving public support to privacy-invading efforts.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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