The Scotsman

Dark web becomes marketplac­e for guns, drugs and data hacking

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The dark web is increasing­ly becoming the marketplac­e for lone-wolf terrorists to buy guns, drug dealers to sell their wares and for hackers to trade personal data, a Johnston Press investigat­ion has found.

Reports by the not-for-profit research organisati­on RAND Europe has revealed that firearm sales on encrypted internet networks such as The Onion Router (Tor) are now a £60,000-a-monthtrade­worldwide – and a quarter of that is heading to Europe.

The National Crime Agency has warned that an increasing number of those arms are arriving at addresses via the postal system in either kit form or disguised as some other package – in one case as a vintage clock.

Large numbers of Syrian migrants are turning to the dark web to buy UK passports, while other studies have revealed the number of drugs being bought and sold on the dark web in the UK has doubled since 2014.

Personal data, one of the fastest growing commoditie­s on the encrypted form of the internet first released into the public domain by US Navy coders in 2004, is also trading hands at a dollar an identity. More than ten million people in the UK are currently unaware that their details are being traded by scammers.

But experts say the rise in criminals using the anonymous cryptomark­ets of the dark web presents the UK with a major legal challenge.

Russell Tyner, the crown prosecutor in the CPS’S Internatio­nal Justice and Organised Crime Division, said the

0 Firearms sales on the dark web are worth about £60,000 a month across the world, according to reports scrambles the IP address of the user to make it look like they are working from a different computer – often in a different country – it also presents issues around which law enforcemen­t agency pursues the investigat­ion.

The solitary terrorist in the 2016 Munich shooting used weapons purchased on the dark web. Ali David Sonboly, was carrying more than 300 bullets in his backpack and pistol when he shot himself, after first killing nine people and wounding 27 more.

During September 2015, Liam Lyburd, a teenager from Newcastle, was allegedly planning to massacre former classmates at Newcastle College. The police discovered a Glock semi-automatic pistol and ammunition at his home. The report states the weapon was bought on the dark web. l Reporting team: Aasma Day, Cahal Milmo, Don Mort, Chris Burn, Ruby Kitchen, Paul Lynch, Oli Poole, Gavin Ledwith, Ben Fishwick, Philip Bradfield and Deborah Punshon

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