This week, Silk Road was shut down for good when the FBI seized the anonymous online marketplace after Ross Ulbricht, aka Dread Pirate Roberts, was arrested. This comes just two weeks after another illegal marketplace called Atlantis shutdown.

Image via wonderhowto.com

However, there are plenty of other black markets hiding within the Deep Web, freely and anonymously accessible using the Tor browser.

Ulbricht's bust is said to come from operational security mistakes, where he used his real name in an email address when communicating with developers about Bitcoin, the main currency used for buying drugs, weapons, and forged documents on Silk Road and other black markets.

This means that the seizure and shutdown was not a result of a security breach in Tor, but to plain sloppiness on Ulbricht's part, which is why Silk Road sellers have already found new homes in lesser known marketplaces across the Tor network.

So, if anyone is looking to buy some cannabis, 3D printed gun files, or Walter White-style blue crystal meth, these online black markets are their best bet.

Just remember, these are all accessible using the Tor browser, which cannot help anonymize anybody if they use legal names, use VPNs subject to subpoena, or provided personal info to other services. Nor should they install plugins or open downloaded documents when still connected online, among other things.