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1.6 billion people go online every day to shop, update social media, and check their
email. But popular search engines like Google and Yahoo barely scratch the surface of internet
usage.
The majority of users can only access 1% of all the information the World Wide Web has
to offer. The rest, deep beneath the surface of conventional search engines, is known as
the Deep Web.
Many websites on the Deep Web can only be accessed through unique web browsers like
‘Tor’. By concealing their identity and traceable IP address, Tor offers its users
almost complete anonymity.
This lack of accountability means that the Deep Web is now a hotbed for criminal activity.
It has become a breeding ground for illicit drug use, violence, pedophilic behavior – and
now even poses a threat to our national security.
One of the deep web’s most successful online vendors is ‘Silk Road’.
Founded in February 2011, Silk Road was a booming illegal drug market, which generated
$1.2 billion in revenue. The site sold a variety of substances, including cannabis, ***,
crystal ***, and MDMA. At least six people are known to have died overdosing on drugs
purchased through Silk Road.
In October 2013, Silk Road was shut down by the FBI. However, similar sites were immediately
rolled out to meet the ‘high’ demand for drugs.
Guns, knives and other deadly weapons are also available for purchase with the simple
click of a mouse on the Deep Web.
And, if you’re not willing to use such weapons yourself, numerous websites advertise the
services of hitmen who will carry out murders for you.
‘Hitman Network’ offers to assassinate a target within three weeks - the only rules
being ‘no children under 16 and no top 10 politicians’. Prices on these sites range
from $10,000 to $200,000 depending on the profession of the intended victim.
Criminals can now also purchase your personal information, meaning that the Deep Web has
gained a reputation as an active hub of financial fraud.
Between 2013 and 2015 cyber criminals from China hacked the United States. They stole
crucial information from the government and key corporations, breaching 4 million people's
records.
Individuals are also readily targeted online - credit card details can be bought online
for as little as $10. According to Forbes, merchants in the United States are losing
$190 billion a year to such fraud.
But perhaps one of the biggest online terrors is the expansion and concealment of online
pedophillic communities. They exist primarily in a subsection of the deep web, known as
the dark web.
These secret websites encourage users to share images and videos of child *** and
abuse, which is generating a widespread *** threat across the globe.
In 2015, Childcare worker Shannon McCoole was arrested for running such a site, which
ranked members based on the amount of child exploitation material they uploaded. He was
sentenced to 35 years imprisonment for sexually abusing at least seven children.
Frighteningly, McCoole’s behaviour is not that unusual. According to The Guardian, 80%
of internet traffic on the dark web is child abuse material.
And the very nature of the Deep Web makes it impossible to regulate.
Black market websites that replaced Silk Road prove that the authorities’ attempts to
shut down specific sites actually have little impact on criminals’ abilities to operate
online. Countless pedophillic sites still exist, despite the efforts of organisations
like Internet Watch to catch perpetrators.
This is largely because of the unfathomable size of the Deep Web, which is approximately
500 times larger than the ‘Surface Internet’.
Not only are our children and health in greater danger, but thanks to the Deep Web, our national
security is more at risk than ever before.
The anonymity of the Deep Web allows extremist groups to communicate and plot terrorist attacks
outside of the reaches of security services. There are even documents online that offer
step-by-step instructions for creating lethal explosives.
A British counter-terrorism unit is currently taking down 100 threatening websites a day.
However, internet safety expert John Carr believes that this is still not enough, as
it’s almost impossible for law enforcement agencies to track the online activity of terrorists.
But not everything on the deep web is harmful.
Lots of mainstream web-users regularly create test versions of their websites on the deep
web, so they can check content before it goes live.
The Deep Web also offers a lifeline to those living under brutal political regimes. It
allows people living in North Korea and China to bypass dictatorial censorship laws, by
accessing news from around the world, and communicating the struggles they face.
But despite the salvation it offers, the deep web is first and foremost a gateway for illegal
activity. It enables the proliferation of the black market, and bypasses laws that exist
to protect our very existence.