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Meet Darknet, the hidden, anonymous underbelly of the searchable Web

There’s a place lurking beneath the Internet you use every day.

It’s a hidden underbelly, home to both rogues and political activists, and accessed only with the help of specially designed anonymizing software. It’s a secretive place, where Arab Spring dissidents can hide their digital tracks, a place where whistleblowers can reach out safely to scoop-seeking media outlets. And, yes, it’s also a dangerous place, where a lot of illicit, underground nastiness occurs.

There, you’ll find a society that lurks intentionally in the blind spots of search engines. Some call it the Darknet. All call it hard to reach—though it’s hardly impregnable, given last week’s news of security vulnerabilities. as well as site takedowns following the arrest of an alleged pornographer. Like a demilitarized zone or a lawless land, it’s not a place most people visit—nor should they. But by the time you’re done reading this article, you’ll know more about this shadowy, parallel online universe than Bing or Yahoo ever will.

[ Further reading: How the new age of antivirus software will protect your PC ] The Darknet ain’t your grandma’s Internet—but its depths hide both the noble and the treacherous. (Click to enlarge.)

Delving into the Darknet

Darknets are small niches of the “Deep Web,” which is itself a catch-all term for the assorted Net-connected stuff that isn’t discoverable by the major search engines. (BrightPlanet has a stellar Deep Web primer.)

Most of the flotsam and jetsam found in the Deep Web are unintentional cast-offs: dynamic database queries and odd file formats that search engines aren’t equipped to deal with. Darknets, on the other hand, deliberately hide from the prying eyes of the searchable Web. They cloak themselves in obscurity with specialized software that guarantees encryption and anonymity between users, as well as protocols or domains that the average webizen will never stumble across.

Your chances of finding these clandestine networks, much less specific content on them, are virtually nil unless someone already in the know points you in the right direction.

And it’s no wonder why. Consider Onionland, the major Darknet hiding inside the anonymity-protecting Tor network, which was the focus of last week’s hubbub. (Fun fact: The Onionland name pays homage to Tor, which was originally an acronym for “The Onion Router .”)

Diving into Onionland—after you’ve installed the proper software and taken the proper safety precautions; more on that later—is awfully reminiscent of using the Surface Web of yesteryear. Since search engines don’t trawl the depths of the Darknet, the best guide to its realms are simple link directories.

Yes, the underbelly of the Web has yet to move beyond the old Yahoo days.

The Hidden Wiki is sometimes referred to as the front door of Onionland. Be careful what you click. (Click to enlarge.)

Even the major directories aren’t completely reliable. Like a swamp, Onionland is constantly shifting, with Hidden Services appearing and vanishing on a daily basis. (Again, more on Hidden Services later.) A lot of sites listed on Onionland directories are simply gone now. Heck, even the directories themselves sometimes shift URLs, and you have to track down their new location, either within Onionland itself or on the .onion subreddit.

That said, three common Onionland starting points are The Hidden Wiki. TorDir. and TorLinks. All the directories in Onionland always point to Torch as a search engine of onions, but it never works properly. You can get to Torch’s front page just fine, but individual searches time out. Every. Single. Time.

The infamous Silk Road. (Click to enlarge.)

Once you’re on a directory, one thing becomes overwhelmingly obvious: A lot of dirty, downright illegal stuff happens in Onionland. You’ll quickly find links to credit-card scammers, forged documents and currency, weapons dealers, gambling sites, marketplaces for every vice imaginable, hacker havens, the types of illegal and disgusting porn that get chased off the Surface Web, and even the notorious Silk Road trading post.

But wait! Don’t close your browser in disgust quite yet. Do be smart about your browsing—we have more security tips on the next page—and above all else, remember Onionland’s anarchistic nature.

  • Tip #1: You don’t have to click anything you don’t want to. You aren’t likely to stumble across questionable stuff unless you specifically seek it out.
  • Tip #2: Remember that thanks to the underlying Tor technology, this Darknet is truly anonymous. If something for sale on the Darknet catches your eye, ask yourself: Are the services listed in this major Onionland wiki legit, or are they fronts for people looking to separate fools from their Bitcoins? Many of the scarier listings in directories are flat-out scams.

The bright side of the Darknet

But the same anonymity that makes Onionland a haven for weapons dealers and perverts also makes it a bastion of a more noble cause: free speech.

Many countries lack the equivalent of the United States’ First Amendment. Darknets grant everyone the power to speak freely without fear of censorship or persecution. According to the Tor Project. anonymizing Hidden Services have been a refuge for dissidents in Lebanon, Mauritania, and Arab Spring nations; hosted blogs in countries where the exchange of ideas is frowned upon; and served as mirrors for websites that attract governmental or corporate angst, such as GlobalLeaks, Indymedia. and Wikileaks.

The New Yorker ’s Strongbox. which allows whistleblowers to securely and anonymously communicate with the magazine, is a Tor Hidden Service. The Tor Project says that authorities offer similarly secure tip lines, and that some militaries even use Hidden Services to create online secure command and control centers.

The New Yorker’s Strongbox whistleblower communication tool.

Delve deeper into the Darknet, and you’ll find a veritable cornucopia of services dedicated to spreading the word: secure messaging and file-sharing tools, libraries chock-full of political literature, anonymous boards dedicated to intelligent debate, and much, much more. You’ll even find a completely anonymous mirror for the DuckDuckGo search engine. in case you’re worried about Google or Microsoft looking over your shoulder while you surf the Surface Web.

And those are all things that you can find from the major directories. Imagine the secrets flowing even deeper, beyond the signposts and outside links. None of Onionland’s positive benefits—none —would be possible if it didn’t offer a level of security that made the service so appealing to less savory types.

That’s the rub about free speech: Sometimes people say and do things you don’t like.

Intrigued? Read on to learn more about the technical aspects of Onionland, and the tools and precautions you’ll need to visit the Darknet yourself.