From RationalWiki

Why the darknet is bullshit

Content

Theis the part of the World Wide Web that is not findable through search engines.In contrast, theis the part of the Web that is an overlay network that can only be accessed with special software.News and media outlets confuse the terms as the same thing. One example of a dark web is the Tor network. But not all Tor sites are also part of the deep web, since many of them can be found via search engines, both specialized ones, and via Tor2web through regular ones. Public exposure to the deep and dark web remains largely limited to sensationalist reporting, covering, for example, red rooms and snuff films . Unfounded myth and legend continue to seep into popular culture as well.

By 2013, with the Silk Road shut-down all over the news, the term "Deep Web" embedded itself into mass consciousness as this dark scary thing out there. While it is true that there are drug and illegal markets on the darkweb, as illustrated in deep dot web's top drug-markets list[3] for example, this is also true for the clearnet:

“ ” And besides, the normal Internet already hosts loads of child porn, and is where human trafficking definitely takes place. [...] As long as people are obsessed with finding the next terrible thing on the dark web, these scam and troll sites are going to continue—feeding the exaggerated myth of what ultimately boils down to just a small collection of websites. —Joseph Cox[4]

But so long as general media keep covering alleged drug busts and other criminal activities on the darkweb, the fallacious legend will live on.

Garbage

Web based Hidden Services in February 2016[5][6] Category Percentage Violence 0.3% Arms 0.8% Social 1.2% Hacking 1.8% Illegitimate pornography 2.3% Nexus 2.3% Extremism 2.7% Unknown 3.0% Other illicit 3.8% Finance 6.3% Drugs 8.1% Other 19.6% None 47.7%

An accurate portrayal of Hidden Service content distribution can be found on Wikipedia for February 2016.[7][8] The table can be observed on the right.

Note that the the category "None" contains nearly half of Hidden Service content. This makes more sense if you just check out Deep Web in a Nutshell covered below. Also note that the table does not specify whether or not the illegal services are actually legitimate.

Not to mention, the multiple HiddenWiki clones exist to filter out the garbage and present interesting content. In other words, it's not the same thing as a web crawler which scavenges Onionland.[note 1]

Deep web in a nutshell

“ ” Why visit lots of dodgy onion sites on the "dark" web, when you can enjoy being bored out of your wits here on this site in perfect safety? Authentic feelings of disappointment guaranteed, or your money back! —Deep web in a nutshell

Released in May 2015,[9] 'the Deep Web in a nutshell' presents a far more accurate depiction of services that can actually be found.

The abandoned forum — The best board is "I have made a nice forum, but nobody is here".

This site is hosted — Expect to see a lot of sites with only this text!

The weird website with an obnoxious picture

Size

As of September 14th, 2016, harry71's onion crawler has archived a whopping total of over 6,000 onion websites. That's a pretty small number compared to worldwidewebsize.com's estimate of "at least 4.7 billion pages" as of September 14th, 2016.[10] But in reality, if such a dark web were to exist, it would contain a rather small community to begin with considering its supposed barriers. Therefore, the darknet would be very small in size of pages to coincide with the size of the audience; definitely not over 60% of the Internet according to an image below (the method by which this figure was developed is a trade secret).

Deep web "levels"

In 2011 or early 2012,[11] an infographic was created at the time Tor and the Silk Road first gained popularity and crucially at the same time the deep web search term started to be conflated with the dark web. It helped feed the sensationalism and further imprint into the public’s minds what exactly the darknet was.

The concept of such 'levels' of the deep web was produced by an enterprising individual, sharing similarities with Dante's Inferno in its structure. In this (mis)infographic, the further down, the more insane and preposterous the content becomes. A January 2012 attempt at a corresponding corrected info graphic was also created, but never gained comparable popularity due to reliance of text and facts.

The infographic also perpetuates the fallacy that non-clearnet content somehow makes most of the Internet.

Original (mis)infographic Analysis

Level 0 Web — Common web

EVERYTHING The "common web" is a made up name for what is actually the surface web in search engine parlance. Typically the term clearnet is preferred when referring to non-darknet websites. However the deep web/surface web paradigm is simply more popular, despite these being search indexing terms.

Level 1 Web — Surface web

Reddit

Dig

Temple Email Services

Newgrounds

Vampire Freaks

Foreign Social Networks

Human Intel Tasks

Web Hosting

MYSQL [ sic ] Databases

Databases College Campuses For some reason, the infographic portrays the surface web... below the surface. Social networks like Reddit, Vampire Freaks and Human Intel Tasks are also listed here — websites which have very little in common either technically or content wise. MySQL databases and college campuses are at least intranet based services with relationships to search indexing technologies.

Level 2 Web — Bergie web

FTP Servers

Google Locked Results

Honeypots

Loaded Web Servers

Jailbait Porn

Most of the Internet

4chan

RSC

Freehive

Let Me Watch This

Streams Videos

Bunny Tube So that damned iceberg is still in the graphic, so I guess we'll name this level after it. For some reason FTP servers are placed below MySQL databases. Of course, the more edgy content like 4chan and Jailbait is listed. Made up terms like 'Google Locked Results' (presumably officially censored results that come with Lumen links), a pirate streaming service 'Let me Watch This' are placed next to honeypots . But surely if a honeypot was on a deeper level than normal, it would fail at being a honeypot? Try not to overthink this...

Proxy required after this point...

The dark web proper begins below.

Level 3 Web — Deep web

"On the Vanilla" Sources

Heavy Jailbait

Light CP

Gore

Sex Tapes

Celebrity Scandals

VIP Gossip

Hackers

Script Kiddies

Virus Information

FOIE Archives

Suicides

Raid Information

Computer Security

XSS Worm Scripting

FTP Servers (Specific)

Mathematics Research

Supercomputing

Visual Processing

Virtual Reality (Specific) Wait, the deep web inside the deep web? Try not to think too hard... Apparently one can find celebrity scandals here; to be fair, this did pre-date The Fappening allegedly run by a tight-knit hacker group. Vague hacker jargon starts to be introduced such as "XSS worm scripting", "computer security", "visual processing" and apparently "specific virtual reality". And to think all this time you've settled for general virtual reality.

Tor required after this point...

Eliza Data Information

Hacking Groups FTP

Node Transfers

Data Analysis

Post Date Generation

Microsoft Data Secure Networks

Assembly Programmer's Guild

Shell Networking

AI Theorists

Cosmologists/MIT Say "hello" to more hacker jargon such as data analysis, AI theorists, shell networking and the " Assembly Programmer's Guild". Such sites are abundant on the clearnet,[12][13][14][15][16] so why is this on the dark net? What's so bad about machine code? Stop thinking too hard. As for AI information, to date, there are two mirror websites that host an AI titled VIKI. The websites claim that the bot has "been online since 01JAN70 in one form or another. Most likely, these websites were created because of this (mis)infographic.

Level 4 Web — Charter web

Hardcandy

Onion IB

Hidden Wiki

Candycane

Banned Videos

Banned Movies

Banned Books

Questionable Visual Materials

Personal Records

"Line of Blood" Locations

Assassination Box

Headhunters

Illegal Game Hunters

Rare Animal Trade

Hard Drugs Trade

Human Trafficking

Corporate Exchange

Multi-Billion Dollar Deals

Most of the Black Market Let's list random sick shit: child pornography, The Hidden Wiki (wtf?), Assassination Box, human trafficking, and god forbid banned books are here. The hard drugs trade can be found here and clearly not on well documented darknet markets . To be fair, one can find various anarchist writings but no more so than on the clearnet. In addition, "personal records" a.k.a. doxes can be found on websites such as Doxbin.

Closed Shell System required after this point...

80% of the Internet exists below this line...

This is rather not 80% of the physical information, but 80% of the information that effects [ sic ] you directly The (mis)infographic makes another reference to deep web search technologies while also making a bullshit statement on how the information affects someone.

Polymeric falcighol derivation exists below this line...

Shit… I don't really know faggot. All I know is that you need to solve quantum mechanics in order to view this on even the normal web, let alone closed servers. Quantum Computation exists, and the government powers have them. So be careful what you do here. The (mis)infographic just makes up the term Polymeric falcighol derivation. It wouldn't be a proper sensationalist graphic without a little homophobia and conspiracy-theory mongering, would it?

Level 5 Web — Marianas web

The day you get here is, [ sic ] when OP is no longer a faggot. sell access to the Marianas Web. People are now even trying toto the Marianas Web. A reference to the Mariana Trench, now an urban legend in its own right.[22] And of course Takedownman has reported on it...[23]

But wait, there's more! Some time around December 2014 an update to the infographic was created.

Level 6 web — (?)

Intermediary between the Marianas Web and Levels 7 and Level 8 Level 6: a level that exists for the sole purpose of being one.

Level 7 web — The Fog/Virus Soup

The best way to describe level 7 would but [ sic ] a war zone. Where it is every man for themselves, where everyone who "made" it here is trying to get to the 8th level preventing other people from getting there. ಠ_ಠ

Level 8 web — The Primarch System

Level 8 is impossible to access directly. The primarch system is what controls the Internet. No government or organization has control of it. Nobody even knows what it is. The system is an anomaly discovered in the 2000's. It is unresponsive, but sends out unalterable commands to the entire net, randomly. The entire 7th Level is people trying to gain access to Level 8 and stopping others from getting there. Level 8 is thought to be separated by "level 17 quantum t.r.001 level function lock" which is virtually impossible for our computers to break. Also known as "The Final Boss of The Internet" No, seriously…

Article analysis

[24] PC World — Meet Darknet, the hidden, anonymous underbelly of the searchable Web

In all fairness, this article does a better job compared to most websites by showing the positives and negatives of onionland. In addition, it recommend the reader to take security precautions. However, it focuses too much on illegal activity and makes several errors:

[Y]ou’ll find a society that lurks intentionally in the blind spots of search engines. [...] Have an example: http://idnxcnkne4qt76tg.onion/ For those using Tor, that link will lead to the Tor Project website. For everyone else: a dead end. There’s no chance that you—or Google—will stumble across that site by accident, or any of the secretive Darknets that have sprung up around technologies such as I2P or Freenet (which Alex Wawro touched upon in the August issue of PCWorld magazine). Not true. Due to the existence of ".casa" and ".to", onionland websites show up on Google search results. In addition, Google does not filter archives that store onionland links.

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. News flash: Tor is not necessarily anonymous because attacks can be made against it. According to the Tails website, a global adversary studying "the timing and volume patterns of the different communications across the network, it would be statistically possible to identify Tor circuits and thus match Tor users and destination servers."[25]

Speaking of which, be very, very careful when slinging your digital dollars around. The anonymity of Bitcoins and the Darknet makes Onionland a haven for scammers. Darknet markets such as pioneered by the Silk Road and successors are such a significant part of the Bitcoin and dark web economy that crypto currencies often play a part in mythos. Nonetheless, the nature of the feedback[26][27] and escrow systems operated by the marketplaces and extended ecosystems means that onionland markets are — at a large extent — community regulated. Because of this, the onionland markets are focused on reputation, something that must be maintained delicately over an extended period of time. This results in a good willed community — upset druggies without their drugs are very vocal after all — though there's always that one asshole out there that will send you sand instead of cookies.[28] Even with regulation, onionland's markets are not a hundred percent safe, although scam sites have distinct red flags that are relatively easy to spot: lack any sort of reviews; have duplicate listings across different sites; and have the same UI.[29] Markets such as BlackBank[30] and Evolution [31] have performed exit scams in the past, however, these are standout examples.

Why people believe this bullshit

The mythos behind the deep web draws parallels to the Atlantis myth. In both cases, the subjects' portrayal takes advantage of human curiosity and wonderment. Even if there is little to no actual evidence that points to a certain conclusion, evidence to support people's opinions is conjured through unrelated "evidence" or entirely falsified to sell stories. As for the latter, people look at stories from news authorities and assume the content and themes presented in said stories must be true.

Stories about Silk Road introduced the connotation that the Tor Network and other anonymous networks like I2P are mainly for illegal purposes. Now that this connotation has been initiated, people believe it and start their own Hidden Services and Youtube videos to prolong it.[4] Hidden services have the security advantage of having end-to-end encryption for web browsing[32] and Tor Browser has great security features; it's disappointing that the Tor Project's name is tarnished by stories related to Silk Road and urban legends.





See also

For those of you in the mood, RationalWiki has a fun article about Tor.

For those of you in the mood, RationalWiki has a fun article about Derp web adventure‎.

Pizzagate — Want to see some more infographic nonsense? The alt-right has you covered.

Notes

↑ Because apparently the DarkWeb only exists on Tor?