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DarkMarket, the Decentralized Answer To Silk Road, Is About More Than Just Drugs

Daniel_Stuckey (2647775) writes "If you were anywhere near the internet last week, you would have come across reports of 'DarkMarket', a new system being touted as a Silk Road the FBI could never seize. Although running in a similar fashion on the face of things — some users buy drugs, other sell them — DarkMarket works in a fundamentally different way to Silk Road or any other online marketplace. Instead of being hosted off a server like a normal website, it runs in a decentralized manner: Users download a piece of software onto their device, which allows them to access the DarkMarket site. The really clever part is how the system incorporates data with the blockchain, the part of Bitcoin that everybody can see. Rather than just carrying the currency from buyer to seller, data such as user names are added to the blockchain by including it in very small transactions, meaning that its impossible to impersonate someone else because their pseudonymous identity is preserved in the ledger. Andy Greenberg has a good explanation of how it works over at Wired. The prototype includes nearly everything needed for a working marketplace: private communications between buyers and sellers, Bitcoin transfers to make purchases, and an escrow system that protects the cash until it is confirmed that the buyer has received their product. Theoretically, being a decentralized and thus autonomous network, it would still run without any assistance from site administrators, and would certainly make seizing a central server, as was the case with the original Silk Road, impossible."

251 comments

  1. Eeeehhhhhh by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Is About More Than Just Drugs"

    But really...it's about drugs. You don't need to sell Beanie Babies anonymously.

    1. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by pla · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But really...it's about drugs. You don't need to sell Beanie Babies anonymously.

      And showering in a public bathhouse takes fewer resources than doing it in your own bathroom. You don't need to shower privately.

      I would also point out that cash has more anonymity than any digital currency ever created. Why do you need cash, you goddamned drug-dealing terrorist?

      / tldr: "Need" has nothing to do with it. Uncle Sam has no business in my business.

    2. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Bob_Who · · Score: 2, Funny

      "Is About More Than Just Drugs"

      But really...it's about drugs. You don't need to sell Beanie Babies anonymously.

      I dunno..... It's probably good policy to sell most babies anonymously....

    3. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Your public bathhouse example is terrible.

      Most people use cash because it's fast and convenient, not because it's anonymous. When people use cash specifically for it's anonymity, it's usually to buy drugs.

      But you can't use cash online. So for non-drug purchases, most people use regular web sites and credit cards.

    4. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speak for yourself! The underground Beanie Baby trade is one of the longest-running segment of the internet economy.

      No-one must know how much of my paycheck goes to stuffed elephants each month, especially not the government.

    5. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose what the original poster meant was "Why would I buy beanie babies off of DarkMarket when I could buy them off of Amazon". Furthermore, cash being anonymous doesn't make it easier to do illegal things with than bitcoin. With cash, you actually have to BE there. If you're not there, then someone you give your cash to has to be there. Furthermore, cash has serial numbers that can be traced to your bank.

      It's all well and good to say bitcoin is amazing and freeing, but let's not delude ourselves into thinking that things like this aren't for illegal things like drugs and human trafficking.

    6. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by pla · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your public bathhouse example is terrible.

      So, you didn't make it all the way down to my "tldr" summary, eh?

      "Need" has nothing to do with it. But you've already stopped reading.

    7. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by elfprince13 · · Score: 1

      The property that makes cash convenient in real life is the same one that make it anonymous: it's decentralized. Why should the situation be any different online (excepting technology lag and first-to-market effects)?

    8. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by amosh · · Score: 1

      So leaving my house, traveling to a public area, which requires changing rooms my house doesn't need, cleaning to a level my house doesn't require, etc., etc., somehow takes less resources?

      Don't be stupid. If you can't come up with analogies that make a lick of sense, don't use analogies.

    9. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 2

      Did you not read past the first sentence of my reply?

      If you want to go to a huge amount of extra effort to buy legal things anonymously in order to make a point to The Man, feel free. Very few people will be joining you.

    10. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by amosh · · Score: 1

      Dude.

      1. This is "discussing things with humans 101". If the first part of your argument is so stupid that it makes people STOP READING WHAT YOU HAVE TO SAY, you are making a BAD ARGUMENT.

      2. If you're claiming that your TL;DR contains an entirely different point than what you state above, you're using TL;DR wrong.

      3. Protip - "Uncle Sam has no business in my business" is pretty damn asinine. Because it's pretty clear that he DOES, especially if your business is selling illegal weapons, murder, kidnapping, etc.

    11. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Charliemopps · · Score: 2

      "Is About More Than Just Drugs"

      But really...it's about drugs. You don't need to sell Beanie Babies anonymously.

      Oh yea?
      http://www.deseretnews.com/art...

      Have faith, eventually everything ends up illegal.

    12. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by jafac · · Score: 1

      They're not selling drugs.

      They're selling FREEDOM!!!

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    13. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by jschrod · · Score: 2
      > Protip - "Uncle Sam has no business in my business" is pretty damn asinine. Because it's pretty clear that he DOES,

      In my world, Uncle Sam has no business, but resumes to collect all meta-data of any communication that I do, and for some states even all communication, just because he can. He's called upon it, but the answer is clear: I'll continue to do it because I can. I'm the dominant military power on Earth, I don't have to care for international rights, for human dignity, for justice. Uncle Sam tells me that he's the imperial power left on Earth that can decide who's allowed to live and to die without any court that may intervene.

      > especially if your business is selling illegal weapons, murder, kidnapping, etc.

      Sorry, but that's not my business. I'm just a normal non-US person supervised by the NSA, as all of us non-US folks are.

      Wait, you mean that your civil rights are only for US citizens? They don't belong to us?

      There was a time when the U.S.A was looked upon as the guiding light. I'm old enough to remember it. Guys, you destroyed that. You turtore, you kill hundreds of thousands of innocents -- much more than al-quaida ever did, you're the 800 pounds bully on the international political circuit, you won't coorperate, you are the scam on Earth.

      > [Uncle Sam] is pretty clear that he DOES have business

      You might think so. But I sincerly hope that your Tea Party will take over policital power in the US. It will be a few harsh years for us, world-wide, but they will destroy you better than any foe could do. Then we will be able to continue to build the world society that you don't want to be part of. Sigh, your ancestors lend us the ideas, but you abandoned them.

      --

      Joachim

      People don't write Manifestos any more -- what's going on in this world? [Frank Zappa]

    14. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      So it's about drugs. Your point being?

      Personally, I think nobody has a say when someone wants to kill himself using various substances. Everyone has the right to off himself in the most convenient ways.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    15. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by deadweight · · Score: 1

      So why doesn't the EU get a good head start and quit NATO? Oh wait.............

    16. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      Yeah, there is also Sex, and Rock n' Roll.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    17. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 1

      So it's about drugs. Your point being?

      That the headline of the article says the opposite. I don't expect you to read the article, but I do expect you to read the headline.

    18. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 1

      Have faith, eventually everything ends up illegal.

      Yet the link you include is about the opposite situation.

    19. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by router · · Score: 1

      Yeah, we're working on it. We have a system to correct this crap, hopefully we'll use it. In the meantime, make sure yours is just as transparent as you want ours to be. Maybe even show us the way. It would really help out, if you are indeed using the ideas our founders gave you....

      Oh, and the NSA et. al. also spy on all the US citizens. Its not like they really tried hard to avoid it. They can have any non-US entity do it for them and share the results. We're all sorta in this together, us humans.

      The Oligarchy in the US will get fixed eventually, we all hope for the better. It would be, you know, easier, if certain eurasian countries could stop invading their neighbors, and all. Have hope, humans are better than this.

    20. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      paying in cash is a few orders of magnitude less difficult than buying bitcoins and setting up an esoteric decentralized p2p cryptomarket

    21. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

      NONONO! That's the wrong solution. Buying and selling Babies only ACCELERATES the Idiocracy.

    22. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      our founders gave you

      Fuck off.
      The American founding fathers did NOT invent liberty, freedom, democracy or anything else for that matter. They merely IMPLEMENTED already existing ideals that they selected for their merit. No small feat, to be sure, but your arrogant "America is God's gift to humanity" attitude is pathetic. Just taking a quick look around the world today reveals that America is not a gift to mankind. More of a scourge, really.

    23. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes you do, cocaine packed Beanie Babies are very popular.

    24. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, it's most likely about more than drugs... not that that "more" was more legal.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    25. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Tom · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Most people use cash because it's fast and convenient, not because it's anonymous. When people use cash specifically for it's anonymity, it's usually to buy drugs.

      [citation needed]

      You assume everyone thinks like you do. Many people don't. I'm not the only person who uses cash for almost all my regular shopping because anonymity. Not because I'm afraid of the police (unless they've outlawed strawberries and tooth paste), but because I don't want corporations to profile me for more targeted advertisement.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    26. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would not need to be about drugs if the government wasn't so too faced about it. After all the CIA created the global market and grew it to the size we know today in order to fund their dirty little secrets.

      All the government is intent on doing is making sure they get their cut no matter what. Users , related crime victims> Pah they dont care its all about the money.

    27. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because our politicians are just as bought as yours are

    28. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a time when the U.S.A was looked upon as the guiding light. I'm old enough to remember it.

      Americans were better at propaganda back then, it's true. If you crack open a history book, you can find terrible things in any decade of American (or any other country's) history.

    29. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about sex shops? I really try to pay by cash as much as possible, but that is one where I will only pay by cash.

    30. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Wait, you mean that your civil rights are only for US citizens? They don't belong to us?

      Yeah, pretty much.

      Just curious, do you really believe that your country's espionage apparatus is careful to obey the laws of every other country in the world when they spy on foreigners?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    31. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But really...it's about drugs. You don't need to sell Beanie Babies anonymously.

      Actually...

      http://www.forbes.com/sites/abrambrown/2014/01/08/beanie-babies-creator-ty-warner-deserves-jailtiime-for-tax-evasion-prosecutors/

      You were saying?

    32. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you can't use cash online.

      Yes, you can. It requires an envelope and a stamp.

      So for non-drug purchases, most people use regular web sites and credit cards.

      I fail to see how a drug purchase harms anyone. How is it different than buying a gun?

      The truth is drugs are a type of arms. This is why the powers that be (claim) to not like them.

      Because they are a weapon of sorts.

    33. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? It's the US invading, asshole. You thinking you can change things with a vote is how they stay in control. You're so fucking stupid you're not even wrong.

    34. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I and my wife pretty much use cash exclusively for everything (including rent and bills) and have for all of my life. I don't even have a bank account (she and our business do) and it's actually more convenient and causes fewer situations where we thought we had more money than we did. Yes, I happen to buy marijuana with my cash but that's the extent of my "illegal cash purchases" and technically, wouldn't even count if I were in a neighboring state.

      Everyone I do business with (and I assure you, some of them are VERY important people) has used the phrase "cash is king" and I absolutely agree.

      Whatever your reason is to use cash, you have a damn right to do so without people assuming you are a terrorist or a child trafficker. Get a fucking clue, people.

      tl;dr: I agree with Tom

    35. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And showering in a public bathhouse takes fewer resources than doing it in your own bathroom. You don't need to shower privately."

      This is retarded. You still shower either way, only in one case you spent time getting to the bathhouse - so the bathhouse shower takes more resources dumbass.

    36. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "When people use cash specifically for it's anonymity, it's usually to buy drugs."

      Fuck off.

      The obvious: sex toys, pornography, family planning, "embarassing" medical treatments.

      Not so obvious: a fundamental desire not to have my buying habits tracked by any number of organisations that will either use/misuse that information for their own profit/motivations. And/or expose that information through data leaks to any number of non-friendly or otherwise, government or private individuals.

      So like I said, fuck right off with your anti-cash rhetoric.

      Cash is great.

    37. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > Most people use cash because it's fast and convenient, not because it's anonymous. When people use cash
      > specifically for it's anonymity, it's usually to buy drugs.

      Most people use private showers rather than public baths because its fast and convenient, not because it's anonymous. When people use private baths specifically for anonymity, usually its to masturbate.

      Oh wait no.... thats a preposterous conclusion pulled out of thin air.

      Have you never heard of anyone going to a car dealership and asking "how much for cash?" Do you really think that is about convienice? You think the same cash discount applied to other work is about convienice?

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    38. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do when you pull the old dusty beanie baby box from the attic and find out they worth 20k and then get the tax bill after posting them on ebay to sell...this will soon be the norm

    39. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh, when I use cash for anonymity it is usually for sex toys.

    40. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by anagama · · Score: 1

      Actually, I often use cash to buy stuff precisely because I do care about my anonymity. Considering how apathetic the public is to the 4th Amendment, and considering how absolutely rabid the government is about finding out information, cash is the only thing left to preserve some level of dignity.

      I won't call it a probability, merely a possibility, but sometime in the future, it could well happen that eating lunch at McDonalds too many times per week could adversely affect health insurance rates. Or maybe you buy some booze at a liquor store and become a target for being pulled over on the off chance you also drank the booze and drove. Or maybe you bought a particular book 5 years ago that becomes illegal and subject to retroactive prosecution.

      I'm not saying I expect these things to happen, just that they are possibilities. Of course in the 90s, if you asked me if I expected the Feds to spy on all Americans, I would thought that a foil hat concept, but look at where we are today. Anyway, using cash is a method to protect against future government abuse and when you look at how the US Federal Government operates in such fundamentally un-American ways, there's certainly no harm in taking steps to protect yourself from it. Minimizing your purchase history is a good place to start. That takes cash.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    41. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 1

      [citation needed]

      You assume everyone thinks like you do. Many people don't

      But a large majority think like me.

      Source: I have stood in line at the grocery store.

    42. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll join him

    43. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 1

      My friend's dad tried to pay cash for a car and couldn't because the dealership had no procedure for accepting cash.

      There is no cash discount on cars. If you finance it, the dealership gets paid in full up front by the financier. It makes no difference to them.

    44. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Many people don't.

      [citation needed]

    45. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by Tom · · Score: 1

      I agree. Most people give up their personal information for next to nothing, which is proof of a) stupidity, b) disregard for privacy and c) no knowledge about the true value of it

      Nevertheless, there is a sizeable minority of people who are different. Probably more than drug dealers.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    46. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by bezzeb · · Score: 1

      Geeze, glad I live in Eurpoe now as an expat (not England - shudder). There is a strong living memory continentally of how horrible society can be if a central authority knows when where and what you purchase and who all your associates and family are. This attitude that only illegal thigs are purchased with cash and that credit cards are so convenient is just propoganda you've been spoon fed since the cradle. Question what you think you know and the motives of the people who try to shape your opinions and actions.

      Besides, it's not today's laws you need to worry about. It's future laws handed down retroactively by an "elected" crackpot you should fear as they start tapping into the digital histories of an entire population seeking wrong doers.

      It doesn't hurt that cash has no bank fees, and that ATM's virtually everywhere. It's a vital component to a free society in this digital age, and we need to appreciate and enjoy cash as a healthy medium which encourages commerce and jobs to stay within our communities. (As opposed to online shopping which just transfers profits to overseas tax havens and up some yacht owner's nose.)

    47. Re:Eeeehhhhhh by smithmc · · Score: 1

      So what if it's about drugs? Some of them should be legal.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  2. Escrow? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    an escrow system that protects the cash until it is confirmed that the buyer has received their product

    I swear it hasn't arrived yet! [bubble bubble bubble] Really and for true!

    1. Re:Escrow? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I assume the UPS tracking number would expose your lies.

    2. Re:Escrow? by machineghost · · Score: 1

      And? If there's no middle man then ultimately someone (in this case it sounds like the buyer) has total control over the transaction. It doesn't matter what UPS says, if they don't want to release the funds they don't have to.

      In a dark market like this the ONLY protection you have against fraud is the other party's reputation.

    3. Re:Escrow? by Dino · · Score: 1

      And? If there's no middle man then ultimately someone (in this case it sounds like the buyer) has total control over the transaction. It doesn't matter what UPS says, if they don't want to release the funds they don't have to.

      In a dark market like this the ONLY protection you have against fraud is the other party's reputation.

      Did you even read the article? It describes how a third party (arbiter) is agreed to by each party. It takes 2 out of 3 signatures to finalize the transaction (minus arbiter fee).

      --
      That's not what I meant.
    4. Re:Escrow? by BungaDunga · · Score: 1

      It has an escrow functionality, with an arbiter chosen by consensus between the buyer and the seller. The buyer and the seller can both provide the tracking number to the arbiter, and the arbiter decides who gets the funds: the buyer (effectively reversing the transaction) or the seller (completing it).

    5. Re:Escrow? by ADRA · · Score: 1

      And what happens if the Arbiter sends both replies to the block chain? Who 'win's?

      --
      Bye!
    6. Re:Escrow? by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

      Whichever one is received first. The escrow portion of this is the easy and simple part, and you guys are over-complicating it.

      --
      This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
  3. This is the endgame.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the age of illegal software, illegal protocols and the cops busting down your door when your ISPs DPI heuristics make a pattern match against something they don't like. Oh well, we knew it was coming some day.

    1. Re:This is the endgame.. by scarboni888 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. I'd like to see you post that non-anonymously, chump.

    2. Re:This is the endgame.. by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 2

      This is why you encrypt EVERYTHING. Nothing should be sent in the clear, it makes it really friggin hard to identify what might be illegal and what might just a SSL session with your bank.

      Will people EVER learn this? Encrypt, always, everywhere, excessively.

    3. Re: This is the endgame.. by AcerbusNoir · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's my eyes going bad in my old age, or my super human ability to auto-decypher your post... but it looks like plain unencrypted English to me. ;)

    4. Re: This is the endgame.. by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's my eyes going bad in my old age, or my super human ability to auto-decypher your post... but it looks like plain unencrypted English to me. ;)

      It wasn't when it left my computer. :D

  4. So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by John.Banister · · Score: 1

    but I don't realize that the transaction is "I'll buy 6 of your kidnapping victims for my snuff film," then my public key that allows them to rate me as a fine arbiter for the transaction also links me right in as an accessory to murder.

    1. Re:So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by deadweight · · Score: 2

      But .but........they never arrived! Damn that UPS tracking system......

    2. Re:So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 2

      If a UPS delivery guy delivers a gun (without knowing it is a gun, and it looks like ordinary package), and the gun is used to kill someone. Is the UPS delivery guy an accessory to murder?

    3. Re:So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by amosh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It depends - does the guy work for UPS? Probably not.

      Does the guy work for "DARK SHIPMENTS ANONYMOUS - ANYTHING DELIVERED ANY TIME OF DAY TO ANYWHERE, BUT NOTHING ILLEGAL, HEH HEH HEH Incorporated"? If he does, there's a pretty easy case that he's an accessory.

    4. Re:So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 1

      Exactly, it requires the delivery person to know that what he does is shady, and can be illegal. This is not possible in a market where both legal (weed is pretty common in these markets and pretty much legal) and illegal stuff can happen.

    5. Re:So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by amosh · · Score: 1

      Exactly, it requires the delivery person to know that what he does is shady, and can be illegal. This is not possible in a market where both legal (weed is pretty common in these markets and pretty much legal) and illegal stuff can happen.

      Can you please reread what you said? I really think you need to. You are saying that, in a market where the goods range from "of dubious legality" (weed) to "absolutely illegal", it is "not possible" to know that what you're doing "can be illegal"? I think you might be stepping on your own toes.

      Thank you for making my point so effectively, I guess?

    6. Re:So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 1

      I did. I said the market can range from legal to illegal, depending on the jurisdiction. Weed is in mine, for example. Everything is illegal somewhere.

    7. Re:So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      No matter where you live, selling weed without following specific mandated protocols, which involves regulations and taxes, is illegal.

    8. Re: So if I'm the arbiter of a transaction, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually most guns are delivered UPS.

  5. So, about the way it works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have to download a piece of software to your device that allows you to access their services? And it's all around the news? To me it reeks of an NSA inside job. Or a botnet. Or both.

    1. Re:So, about the way it works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why someone hasn't written this as a botnet that can run metamorphosing where-ever it can find a niche.

  6. People are willing to trust some random software? by gweihir · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, if the FBI were smart, then it would have been them writing that software. Or asked the NSA to do it for them. As a bonus, they get all other information on the participant's computers.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  7. So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of this by amosh · · Score: 1, Interesting

    There are a number of things that the Slashdot community - full of nerds and techies - is just stupid and naive about. This is clearly one of them.

    So, defenders of this idea. Mr. "Well, you wouldn't shower in public, so why should your transactions be public," and all people with similar viewpoints - What are the circumstances where you feel that something like this would be useful/necessary?

    And it's not enough to say "I want the gub'ment out of mah bidness!" Because you are not stupid, and you know just as well as I do that there has never been a "black market" in the history of the world that was a force for righteousness and truth. You don't buy a black market gun in the US because you're law-abiding. You know, just as well as I do, that the main reason people will use this is to buy things that are illegal, for uses that are likely to cause harm to someone. So it needs a reason for a reasonable society to allow it to exist.

    This is an honest question and I'm really interested in the discussion. Why should this exist?

  8. Site for illegal activities, just load this... by addikt10 · · Score: 5, Funny

    So let me get this straight:
    There is this site. A site designed for illegal activities...
    And all I need to do is load their software onto my computer? Gosh, where do I sign up.

    I mean, I always trust software from shady characters. That sounds totally safe.

    1. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Except it's an open source program, meaning you can review the code and decide if the risk is okay for you. Maybe it is too risky to run on your laptop that you also use to file your taxes with.. but that old galaxy phone that you wiped and then tossed in a drawer can be used to host the software to which you just access via a local website. Or replace galaxy phone with 2001 era macbook, etc.

      Unless you are just trying to downplay the true legitimacy of the software, this is no different than running openssl on your computer. Oops, heartbleed.

      You're right, I guess we should just walk away from technology.

    2. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by HockeyPuck · · Score: 2

      I've heard this argument since the beginning of time with regards to open source, but is there anybody on earth that could "review the source code" for an entire platform?

      At some point you have to trust someone, like the folks that wrote the driver for your USB mouse...

      Unless you happen to also understand the USB mouse source code at which point I stand corrected, until you can do USB mouse support and video driver and filesystem and etc etc...

    3. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by swillden · · Score: 2

      I've heard this argument since the beginning of time with regards to open source, but is there anybody on earth that could "review the source code" for an entire platform?

      Of course not.

      How is that relevant to reviewing the source for this markeplace client, and deciding if it's safe or malicious? Or do you think there might be hidden malicious code in your OS that is activated by running this apparently-innocuous application?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    4. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      You should rather also review the firmware of your USB mouse, I'd rather expect an exploit in there than in the driver. The USB negotiation between device and computer work on a much lower level than the driver, and without any pesky interference from UAC or other controlling instances.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Heartbleed proves all of your posts moot and irrelevant. Regardless, I'll still use OSS. Just don't hold it up on such a high pedestal next time.

    6. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      The day I have no mod points...

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    7. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by swillden · · Score: 1

      Heartbleed proves all of your posts moot and irrelevant. Regardless, I'll still use OSS. Just don't hold it up on such a high pedestal next time.

      Well, if this client is as crufty and badly-written as OpenSSL (which I've been complaining about for years), then you may have a point.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    8. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't be any worse than installing Windows, who knows where thats been.

    9. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by Tom · · Score: 2

      Really?

      Look, if I were a shady character out to compromise a couple million (the best-case target audience size for a Silk Road replacement) home computers, there are easier ways to do it.

      Write an Angry Birds clone. Send an email saying "free money in the attached file" to a spammers address list. Or just put it on a drive-by website.

      You are attacking a particularily paranoid target audience. If I were a drug pusher, I wouldn't be afraid of other criminals, I'd be afraid that the whole thing is a government sting.

      But then again, it looks like a normal app, so it won't be getting administrator access, you can sandbox it (OS X, no idea if windows has copied it yet) and if you are using it for serious amounts of money, you can review the source code or pay someone to do it for you.

      Of all the things that you can be legitimately afraid of in this field of commercial activity, running the app is probably the least dangerous.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    10. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by HockeyPuck · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, if this client is as crufty and badly-written as OpenSSL (which I've been complaining about for years), then you may have a point.

      Irony: Where you have the skill to completely understand that a major software program is "crufty and badly-written" but don't do anything other than complain about it "for years".

    11. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh noes the CIA know I moved my mouse to the left!

    12. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by swillden · · Score: 1

      Well, if this client is as crufty and badly-written as OpenSSL (which I've been complaining about for years), then you may have a point.

      Irony: Where you have the skill to completely understand that a major software program is "crufty and badly-written" but don't do anything other than complain about it "for years".

      I had one or two other things to do. Still, I take your point, because everyone I know who looked at the OpenSSL source was terrified by it. Its sheer nastiness deterred people from trying to do anything to fix its nastiness, but everyone kept using it because (a) there wasn't any good alternative and (b) everyone else kept using it.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    13. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, you didn't have anything better to do. You're just a fucking idiot who has no idea what they are talking about.

    14. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by sFurbo · · Score: 1

      IIRC, a malevolent USB device can access everything going on on the bus. Do you use a USB keyboard? That is every key-stroke recorded and sent to the CIA.

    15. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by swillden · · Score: 2

      Nah, you didn't have anything better to do. You're just a fucking idiot who has no idea what they are talking about.

      The irony of your statement made me chuckle. You obviously don't know anything about who I am, what I do, or what comments I've made about OpenSSL over the years.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    16. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by docwatson223 · · Score: 1

      Use a computer set aside for the purpose - and have the ability to do a shock wipe once the door kickers show up.

    17. Re:Site for illegal activities, just load this... by Yomers · · Score: 1

      It's open source, https://github.com/darkwallet/...
      Anyway it's safer to run everything in separate VM's
      I guess javascript implementation is possible?

  9. Decentralized, NOT Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, it's decentralized, but in tying identities to a public blockchain, you've completely screwed yourself for anonymity. Never mind the fact that I don't trust their code as far as I can throw it. Sorry, nice try guys.

    1. Re:Decentralized, NOT Anonymous by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

      Why, and why? You raise questions and jump to conclusions, but all without answers. Why is this not anonymous (more or less), and what is wrong with the code? Have you reviewed it? Just blind suspicion?

      --
      This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
    2. Re:Decentralized, NOT Anonymous by fractoid · · Score: 2
      Also, right now, there's a way more serious anonymity issue. FTFA:

      The DarkMarket daemon incorporates a library of commands for peer-to-peer networking known as ZeroMQ, which allows the user’s PC to become a node in a distributed network where every user can communicate directly with every other user.

      At the moment, DarkMarket displays only a bare IP address for every user, but the system’s creators say it will eventually show a pseudonym for each one and also allow product searches.

      They do mention in the article that this isn't done yet, but this feature - an anonymous buyer being able to reliably, securely reach an anonymous source and transfer real money in exchange for products - seems somewhat central to the whole idea.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    3. Re:Decentralized, NOT Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When it comes to crypto, especially crypto on which you intend to base financial transactions which are intended to be anonymous and decentralized with respect to parties that have a great deal of physical and computational power, distrust should be the default behavior. All crypto is suspect until proven otherwise.

    4. Re:Re:Decentralized, NOT Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Projects running a blockchain (like Bitcoin, Litecoin, and DarkMarket) are pseudonymous, not anonymous. Users are tied to identities, but the identities aren't tied to people. They can be created and discarded at will, so they're effectively anonymous if used correctly, but the history of transactions between identities is public knowledge. He's basically playing word games.

  10. All the cool kids are doing it! by artor3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you were anywhere near the internet last week, you would have come across reports of 'DarkMarket'

    Can we get some editors to remove this crap? It's just a stupid marketing gimmick -- "What, you haven't heard of [PRODUCT_NAME]? You must be living under a rock! Everyone who's anyone knows about [PRODUCT_NAME]!"

    1. Re:All the cool kids are doing it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish the editors would remove all of your crap.

    2. Re:All the cool kids are doing it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [Product Name]?? Holy Puck! Thats like [Plate of Shrimp] from Repo man! Holy shit the aliens have landed in Charlie Sheen's trunk.. Amosh might want to get on dark market and invest in some butt plugs to keep the aliens and tea-publicans out!

    3. Re:All the cool kids are doing it! by hodet · · Score: 1

      that's not how slashdot works. This is a truly free speech zone. That's what moderation is for. It buries but never deletes which is a much better system. For those who truly want to read everything set to -1 and fill your boots. For the rest of us set it from 1 to 5 as per your own preference and you can avoid reading totally horrible stuff.

    4. Re:All the cool kids are doing it! by hodet · · Score: 1

      Goddamnit! thought you were bitching about a comment. Nevermind. there are no editors here. baah...back to work.

    5. Re:All the cool kids are doing it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, I was all over the internet last week and I didnt hear of it, but thanks for the crafted PSA Wired/slashdot

      PROTIP: Dont buy drugs from a place Wired talks about

  11. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by mcphail · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I doubt there will be any "legitimate" uses of this particular technology.

    However, it may be a model on which we can base future online retail. The existing model is utterly broken: I really don't want databases all over the world holding my username, password, credit card details and billing address waiting for the next SQL or SSL vulnerability to vomit the information into the hands of criminals. Nor do I want to trust, use or respect services like paypal.

    View this as an iteration towards a more secure and decentralised system for legitimate commerce which keeps credit card and escrow companies out of the equation. Surely that is a good thing?

    --
    Testiculos habet et bene pendentes.
  12. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Bodhammer · · Score: 1

    I mostly agree with you but given the explosion of laws and regulations in the last few years, and the spying, data aggregation, and just general surveillance, many things that were assumed to be private are not.
    http://www.threefeloniesaday.c...
    http://thehill.com/regulation/...

    We are moving toward and not away from totalitarian states. Freedom is decreasing in the world, both personally and economically.

    T.H. White’s totalitarian principle: “Everything not forbidden is compulsory.”
    That is why stuff like this is good, even if it may be used for bad things (just like a gun, knife, rope, car, brick, rock, club, axe, or a sharp pointy stick...).

    --
    "I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
  13. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Bodhammer · · Score: 3

    Devil's advocate - what about "Dallas Buyer's Club"?

    --
    "I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
  14. Could this affect investment vehicles? by jzatopa · · Score: 1

    It seems like this could the kind of market where anyone who wanted to avoid regulators could exchange goods. I could see people using this for way more then drugs.

    1. Re:Could this affect investment vehicles? by deadweight · · Score: 0

      Well it would be like buying Advil at a crackhouse or a meth lab. Advil might be legal, but you are hanging around with people doing plenty of things that are not and it won't be good to have some money in your hand when the DEA/FBI come busting in.

  15. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Old+Fatty+Baldman · · Score: 2

    I like Cuban rum and cigars, and I disagree with the outdated embargo law that prevents me from getting them at the local rum and cigar store.

  16. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by mycroft822 · · Score: 1

    Having watched Dallas Buyer's Club a few weeks back, it comes to mind that one could want to purchase medications that are arbitrarily banned by the FDA because corporate interests have a large lobbying arm.

    I agree with your point that the majority of U.S. users will not be engaging in "legitimate" business dealings, but I doubt there has been a government that has never banned a substance/item/idea because of pressure from special interest groups. A system like this could be used by people in [OppressiveCountryName] for something as honest as buying a book that has been banned.

  17. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by amosh · · Score: 1

    Nice, Bodhammer - that's a really interesting example. But the thing is, it's still an example of a "harmful illegal drug" that some people want to opt out of the regulations of, and assume the risk of any damage that happens. So it's not that different from pot or LSD, for instance - and while I'm in favor of legalization I'm generally not in favor of large black markets. Or dudes whose goal is to circumvent FDA trials because they think they can make a quick buck off of a bunch of desperate and dying people. (Remember, if AZT was in trials during the time period - if it had been found to have fatal side effects, there wouldn't be an oscar-winning movie about the guy... or if there were, he would be the bad guy. He wanted to make money, he got lucky. It happens.)

    Unless, of course, you meant the MOVIE Dallas Buyer's Club - you know, the one whose owners are trademark trolling and actively looking for venues with judges who don't understand modern IP law or the internet so they can most effectively push their MPAA tactics... THAT I would buy over a digital black market rather than paying them :-)

  18. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by amosh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You disagree with a law doesn't give you a moral right to break it.

    I like that you're not even bothering to argue that the law is unjust or unfair - just that you don't like it. While I appreciate the honestly, I don't think this counts as a legitimate use.

    Plus, it's not like either of those things are even vaguely difficult to get.

    Also, I seriously doubt you actually like either Cuban rum or cigars.

  19. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by amosh · · Score: 1

    Historically, black markets have not been used for banned books. Tell me honestly - do you think "purchasing banned books" will be a thing that will ever happen on DarkMarket?

  20. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by amosh · · Score: 1

    Yawn. "Should be" is not a recognized scientific or legal term.

  21. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If the law is wrong - and the Embargo is - you sure as fuck bet you have a moral right to break it!

  22. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by rgbatduke · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Granting the illegal bit, illegal does not equate to "causing harm to someone". Would that it did -- that would be so very rational. However, there are plenty of things one might want to spend money on that are illegal but harm no one but arguably yourself. Drugs is one obvious example, but in many parts of the world buying pornography or sexual toys/aids is illegal, all the way up to being a capital crime. In China or much of the Moslem world, an enormous number of things are illegal that don't harm anyone or anything but the nominal reputation of Islam or Mohammed or Allah, or that represent freedom for repressed majorities like women. We're not really talking only about the relatively permissive US or Western Europe, in other words.

    Of course people will use this to do some things that are directly intended to harm others in non-victimless-crime ways: Steal/pirate and resell IP of various sorts, fence stolen goods, arrange for a hit on your alimony-hungry ex-wife (maybe, dunno if that is a "commodity" it can handle), engage in human trafficking, sell arms. But some people will use it to buy freedom from oppressive governments that have made a whole lot of things that harm no one illegal because they violate some statement made in a piece of pure scriptural crack if you squint your eyes just right when you read it. Because there is rarely any percentage in prosecuting crimes of this sort once one cannot detect them or stop them for long enough for violations to become commonplace, it might even motivate social change.

    To me personally, the tool is not going to be terribly useful. I'm heterosexual and married, my primary vices are at least quasi-legal and tolerated where I live, and I consider buying stolen goods of most varieties to be unethical. It isn't clear that I'd resort to it if I lived in e.g. a Moslem country and had a thing for porn -- no matter how nominally secure, the penalties are pretty horrendous. But I'm guessing that there are those who will value it who aren't planning to use it to hurt others.

    rgb

    --
    Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
  23. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Opportunist · · Score: 2

    A little hint: A fair load of people who know how to use disassemblers didn't start out in the IT security business.

    Do you think this piece of software existed for more than a few seconds before it was fed to a DA and analyzed 'til it croaked?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  24. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Citizens of the former East Bloc would disagree that there are no legitimate and righteous reasons for a black market. Mostly, whether a black market is "morally ok" depends on how morally corrupt your laws are.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  25. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Ok. It is nobody's business, and if someone makes it their business, they're wrong.

    Better?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  26. What happens when you wipe the device? by tomhath · · Score: 1

    If you get busted this would make excellent evidence...

    1. Re:What happens when you wipe the device? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until a situation happens like that one episode of cops where the SWAT team prepared to take down a crack house and busted down the door and after searching the house found out they busted into the house of an 80 year old married couple.

      Once someone gets busted and prosecuted for buying something that is not drugs or assault weapons, and proven not guilty it will be like one of those situations where a kid gets kicked out of school for shaving their head to make their friend with cancer not feel so weird. There is a point when the person making the argument, along with everyone else, sees that they are in the wrong and have that split second to change course and right the ship, and if they don't, it ends up on Good Morning America and the court of public opinion goes nuts and there really is no PR recovery from that. When you are being criticized by Al Roker and Matt Lauer... you're pretty screwed! Some people think that they are never wrong, and those people, more often than not, go off the deep end.

  27. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yawn. "Amosh" is not a recognised scientific or legal term for idiot

    But it should be because holy shit, you are one piss poor troll.

  28. Like a note in the blockchain: 'dodgy stuff here' by gnoshi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe I'm confused, but it sounds to me like what 'DarkMarket' is doing is irrevocably marking some transactions as being associated with DarkMarket. That strikes me as much like writing 'I was used to buy drugs' on a $50 note except that someone can check the entire transaction history of the $50 note back to the beginning of time.

    I guess it will be interesting for researchers assess the proportion of BC that is being used for dubious purposes (unless you actually believe things like 'banned books' are going to be traded on DarkMarket except at the very margins), and feds who want to find people selling drugs (because BC itself is not anonymous).

  29. Re: So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Prescription drugs come to mind. Especially the anti-biotic variety that cost $$$$ in the US, but only $ in Canada, Europe, or anywhere else but the US.

    Considering the costs of some drugs here, I can fully understand why folks would resort to such avenues when push came to shove.

    Hell, I may have to build a bitcoin farm just to afford my chemo in my later years :/

  30. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Old+Fatty+Baldman · · Score: 2

    You're that guy who gets in the carpool lane and drives at exactly the speed limit, aren't you?

  31. Very interesting by msobkow · · Score: 1

    I've always thought the banking systems should be replaced by decentralized servers, where each individual has a banking server. So instead of going to a central bank for processing, transactions would be issued to the server for the "account" instead.

    I figure the government wouldn't like that much.

    And most people wouldn't like it because you wouldn't have guaranteed deposits with such a system.

    But you could just as easily shift the focus of the banking cartels to being the hosts for such decentralized servers, taking on the responsibility for security and backups on behalf of the account owner/holder.

    Just as a for-example, imagine GNU Cash with a remote access protocol that lets other people's GNU Cash instances post transaction pieces to your box. So when your employer issues a direct deposit, instead of going to a bank, it goes to your server and gets deposited directly to your personal server and account using protocols along the line of Bitcoin.

    I figure it's the only way to break the US stranglehold on the global banking systems.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
  32. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Old+Fatty+Baldman · · Score: 1

    Considering how hard it is to find "accidentally leak a couple of bits of your private key" bugs when you've got the original source code, I don't know if that improves the situation. I'm too lazy to click around and find out, but I assume they published their protocol so there can be multiple implementations of the client.

  33. wrong by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    Wow, what a flawless system! Except...
    You show up in person to buy or sell drugs and it's a sting. You mail them and it gets seized or the target and/or sender gets arrested via tracking. Or you mail them to a central escrow hub that also gets traced and arrested and shut down. What a great set of 3 options.

    1. Re:wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People in the past imported drugs through USPS. Deniability and playing the mass of mail.

  34. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by gweihir · · Score: 1

    You are naive. This piece of software has probably not seen one single competent analysis even now.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  35. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by gweihir · · Score: 2

    Considering how long it too to find Heartbleed and that it was found not by source-code analysis but because some people noticed extra bytes in the keep-alive messages, people feeling secure using this thing are likely just kidding themselves. And if there is any real crypto in it, the typical ordinary "hacker" with a big ego and rather pathetic skills does not stand a chance to find or understand anything.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  36. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Bodhammer · · Score: 1

    I did not mean the pirated movie, I meant the concept of buying something that was forbidden by the laws at the time. I watched DBC in blu-ray from Redbox for $1.50 plus tax.
    As I said, Devil's advocate here - There are way too many people, organizations, and governments that want to tell me what to do and how to live my life and I would like a way to "just say no", and do what I want to do with my body, my mind, my money, and as long as it does not infringe on anyone else, its my business and should be free from view.

    --
    "I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
  37. you insensitive clod by pepty · · Score: 1

    it could also be guns, credit card numbers, or exploits

    1. Re:you insensitive clod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And pictures of kids.

      Will someone please think of the children. No, not you Tor users, you think of the children too much already.

  38. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear God, WHAT? How wrong you are. That's exactly what the black market gets used for, ever since books were a thing.

    Not exclusively but yes, banned books get sold on black markets and it's a long established thing.

  39. Everyone's muling? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So if everyone is hosting and serving up peices of the site that sells drugs, that does mean anyone has the app to view and distribute info for site is guilty of being a drug mule?

    1. Re:Everyone's muling? by fractoid · · Score: 1

      That's probably how it'll end up. Cryptography software is now drug paraphernalia.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
  40. I just bet ... by TrollstonButterbeans · · Score: 1

    That this site will be used for selling sex toys in "Moslem countries" and maybe unauthorized copies of "Star Wars" or where people in Muslim countries can share Dutch Cartoons or where people in Christian countries can share copies of "Of The Origin of Species."

    Then again, maybe it will be like the previous "Silk Road" and be all about opium and kitty porn and services to kill people.

    Your heart is in the right place, but your post is a bit of joke in the sense you don't go visit mafia thugs to share free speech except in funny 1980s movies.

    --
    Priest: "Universe from nothing, no laws of physics, sped up time"+ huge discrepancies. Creationism? No. Big Bang Theory
    1. Re:I just bet ... by j-beda · · Score: 1

      Then again, maybe it will be like the previous "Silk Road" and be all about opium and kitty porn and services to kill people.

      Is kitty porn a large problem in your local? Meow.

    2. Re:I just bet ... by Camael · · Score: 2

      Lets tackle your premises one by one.

      First point- services granting anonymity are not automatically 'bad' or 'evil' or used to commit crimes. Don't take my word for it, look at what the Turkey government did .

      Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdoan, has continued going forward with the censor spree and is now blocking access to the Tor Project website. Just two days ago, Turkish Prime Minister, Erdoan, blocked access to YouTube, and the week before Twitter. Now Erdoan is continuing his censor reign targeting the Tor Project.

      As Turkish ISP’s are begin forced into censoring users, Turkish netizens are finding ways around the internet blackout. Turkish users were using Google DNS to evade the censorship and access some of their favorite websites. Turkey has also enforced a ban on Google DNS. As Turkey continues to block popular networks, Turkish citizens are forced into using a VPN or Tor to access some of the largest networks in the world.

      But wait- DarkMarket is different because it sells "opium and kitty porn and services to kill people", right? Wrong. Why don't we let its creators tell you what its for :-

      In its place, the pair both believe that DarkMarket has the potential to act as a platform for a marketplace truly free from government control. In the demonstration in Toronto, MDMA wasn't the only product listed on DarkMarket. A species of tomatoes that is banned in the EU for safety reasons, marmalade made from soon-to-be-discarded produce from grocery stores, and an asthma inhaler were also listed, which, although seemingly innocuous, are all illegal to sell without regulation.

      The last item in particular highlights the less obvious uses of this kind of market. When traveling to the US, it is nearly impossible to purchase an inhaler without a prescription, even if you know you have a condition that requires it. You would need to visit a doctor, be diagnosed, and then allowed to purchase one. “Why can't [someone who has asthma] just buy one, like he needs it?” Swanson asked.

      Don't be so quick to assume illegal = evil. Remember that selling alcohol was once illegal in the US, during the Prohibition.

    3. Re:I just bet ... by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      And I was wrong when I said that I have no vices. I definitely want to buy kitty porn. Would you believe that I've never seen cats doing it? Kitty porn must be rare and hard to get.

      I didn't realize that governments regulated it so strictly, though. For the rest of my life, I'll never be able to drive past the Tom Cat Club (a local, err, "massage" parlor that has been around on the US-70 corridor for fifty years or so) without going into hysterics. Purveyors of kitty porn, pictures of hot pussies. Arrgh.

      Damn, coffee all over the keyboard again.

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    4. Re:I just bet ... by anagama · · Score: 1

      Here ya go, complete with helpers and voyeurs: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

      Or pick your own:
      http://www.youtube.com/results...

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  41. I'm fine with that! by TrollstonButterbeans · · Score: 1

    "You show up in person to buy or sell drugs and it's a sting. "
    You mail them and it gets seized or the target and/or sender gets arrested via tracking.

    It's ALL GOOD as long as it is YOU!

    --
    Priest: "Universe from nothing, no laws of physics, sped up time"+ huge discrepancies. Creationism? No. Big Bang Theory
  42. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    You say that as if they aren't behind all of this already? Who's to say that Silk Road, Bit Coin, TOR etc aren't all just honeypot projects for the NSA? I mean if I was in charge that's the way I'd do it. Let all the small players continue doing business on you Darknet until someone gets too big for their boots then you take them out. I know it sounds a bit Hollywood, but it would the most effective means of control.

  43. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When the government, lead by it's corporate masters, tries to make me it's slave, and I need to purchase things that are illegal but necessary to maintain my personal sovereignty of myself, or help overthrow the government's corporate masters.

    Say what you want about what evil a tool like this could bring, it's a powerful weapon in anyone with a brain's hands. We need that, because the people need to maintain power, or we become nothing more than slaves/cattle.

  44. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Nonesuch · · Score: 2

    You are naive. This piece of software has probably not seen one single competent analysis even now.

    You'd be surprised. The union of people who are competent with IDA Pro (and similar tools) and people interested in Bitcoin is a surprisingly large set. Find a provable backdoor in an application like this and you've got yourself a very good candidate for at least a DEFCON talk, maybe a job at Matasano.

  45. Re:Like a note in the blockchain: 'dodgy stuff her by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i may be way off base but it seems to me you could set up a bitcoin tumbler that mixes them in a way that emulates darkmarket transactions and obscures the actual ones?

  46. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by mycroft822 · · Score: 2

    I wouldn't know because I've been fortunate to live in a country that doesn't suffer from fundamentalist, totalitarian rule. Maybe there are some christians in North Korea that would want to buy a bible?

    You're obviously struggling to disconnect the tech from what it could be used for though. You're question was why this tech should exist. I gave you a very benign purpose that one could use it for as an example, thinking you could extrapolate on what other uses you might take for granted that not every person in the world is allowed. The medication example I used was meant to be the more compelling argument.

  47. Well that was easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All you need to do is supply trojaned binaries that don't match the clean source and then figure out just how few people run disassemblers on open source projects.

    1. Re:Well that was easy... by Tom · · Score: 2

      It's a python app, so there is no binary.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  48. Hey! Wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I'm in the capool lane... especially during rush hour... it's so I can speed pass the lackies not using it. My tax money paid for that lane and I'll be damned if I don't use it as long as I can get away with it! So if I am in that lane, you best get the fuck out of my way if you're moving slower than me.

  49. What HE Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He said he didn't trust it. Not that it is bad.

    People trust or don't trust based on their observations. And it is a perfectly valid reason. People who do illegal things typically don't garner trust amongst law-biding citizens.

  50. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by countach · · Score: 1

    As soon as you decided to trade with someone else, you potentially infringed on someone else, and that's why we have a society with laws to govern it. If you truly don't want to interact with anyone else, you'll have to go find a log cabin somewhere.

  51. Re:yeah .. no by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    So put it in a VM with a firewall blocking anything except what is precisely expected.

    Plus, they have more to lose (their entire market) by exploiting their members than they have to gain (a functioning black market of their own design).

    --
    I hate printers.
  52. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    Who's to say that Silk Road, Bit Coin, TOR etc aren't all just honeypot projects for the NSA?

    Because the people involved in some of them are all well known non-Government types, especially Tor. Besides, even if it were an NSA honeypot, the code is thoroughly understood and vetted, the protocol openly implemented and the actual servers are controlled by a very large number of disparate people and orgs.

    Even if it DID start out as an NSA honeypot, they can't be getting too much from it as it does deliver well on its promise.

    --
    I hate printers.
  53. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A law has to be very, very wrong to have a moral mandate to break it. Most people breaking laws out of "principle" are just doing it because they find the law inconvenient. Laws and rules are the oil of social machinery. Don't be the sand in the crankcase.

    --
    http://www.rootstrikers.org/
  54. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Camael · · Score: 1

    You disagree with a law doesn't give you a moral right to break it.

    I'm rather glad the perpetrators of the Boston Tea Party do not share your beliefs. The thing is, there are just laws and there are unjust laws. At the end of the day, as a thinking individual, it is up to you to decide personally which is which and to further decide whether or not you will obey it. And if you choose not to obey it, to be prepared for the consequences flowing from it.

    History is full of examples of people who chose to disobey unjust laws, such as Ms. Rosa Parks who decided that the race segregation laws at that time were unjust and refused to obey it.

    Laws are the creation of ordinary flawed men, often to benefit a particular class or segment of the population at the expense of others. Just because something is "the law" does not mean that it is just, right, immutable or unchallengeable. The more we humans learn to think critically for ourselves instead of blindly following "the law" like sheep, the better it will be for humankind.

  55. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    If you found anything that could remotely point to a hint of something that could resemble anything like this, you can tour the cons for at least half a year.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  56. reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't want colleagues or (future) employers to know what music I listen to, what my political preference is, where I go for entertainment, what kind of kinky fetishes I might have and such. I don't like targeted ads, since they tend to target me in any situation, private or not, with ads that are also based on my *personal* preferences.

    Even if all I do is legal *now*, it may be illegal in the future and frowned upon when people watch logs.

    Keep in mind that every person commits two felonies and dozens of misdemeanour's every day. If everything you do is tracked, you will get penalized for all af them, putting *everyone* in prison. Laws are there so that if somebody really crosses a boundary that society won't accept, there is a fair reason to put them trough court. If we start to automatically punish everyone for every crime they commit, because we give up privacy, our world stops functioning. We need privacy to remain the default in order to function as individuals *and* as a society.

    Yes, privacy isn't the same as anonymity but in order to remain private in the current society you almost always need anonymity if you're doing it online, so in practice they are synonymous.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
    1. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by Warbothong · · Score: 3, Funny

      I don't want colleagues or (future) employers to know ... what kind of kinky fetishes I might have and such.

      Then why put it right there in your username? ;)

    2. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't want colleagues or (future) employers to know what music I listen to

      I understand your sentiment, but you are probably in self-denial. In offices, there are plenty who put on headphones and then turn them up so all nearby can enjoy their music. I'll bet you've told a few choice friends what you were listening to when asked. I'll bet you are willing to have conversations about the music you listen to with even a complete stranger if the mood is right.

      the problem is that all of these activities is sharing, and unlike the pre-internet world, the cost of duplication and distribution of information is not (under some circumstances) high anymore. So your music preferences can easily be typed into a news forum and duplicated very cheaply to everyone who cares to look, including vendors of music.

      I'm not saying that privacy has been completely lost, I'm saying that privacy has been poorly held in the past. If you truly want to keep a secret, now you have to take personal responsibility for keeping it, instead of relying on the cost to benefit ratio of your secret being too expensive to distribute for those who are interested in it to afford.

      Even if all I do is legal *now*, it may be illegal in the future and frowned upon when people watch logs.

      Slippery slope fallacy.

      Keep in mind that every person commits two felonies and dozens of misdemeanour's every day.

      Unsubstantiated assumption. Could be true, but unlikely. Felonies are still much harder to come by than a 1:2 ratio.

      If everything you do is tracked, you will get penalized for all af them, putting *everyone* in prison.

      Our legal system is not meant to be efficient, and is based on judgement mitigated by your peers. If you think your peers would "put you away" for doing daily living activities, you are wrong.

      Laws are there so that if somebody really crosses a boundary that society won't accept, there is a fair reason to put them trough court. If we start to automatically punish everyone for every crime they commit, because we give up privacy, our world stops functioning. We need privacy to remain the default in order to function as individuals *and* as a society.

      Man, that's really slippery slope. It's impressively so! We went from acknowledgement that we might all transgress minor points of the law on a daily basis to a world where everyone is in jail because of perfect prosecution for each transgression. It's not going to happen, because it's a jury of peers. Trivial shit has to be made out to be serious to get them to buy the charge. If you really want to affect it, you tell your friends that X is not really breaking the law anyway, it's part of daily living; believe it or not, that's far more effective than dreaming up a dystopian world to alter the reality of the current one.

      Yes, privacy isn't the same as anonymity but in order to remain private in the current society you almost always need anonymity if you're doing it online, so in practice they are synonymous.

      A nice distinction between privacy and anonymity, but I wish you clarified it a bit before diving into your argument. I would argue that you could remain private online without anonymity by not voicing your opinion, by word or deed. It sounds harsh, but it is the same in real life. I were to attend a political fundraising campaign as a volunteer, I need not actually voice my support of the political party, my actions speak as loudly as my words might.

      I'll wager that you do stuff online that you don't like a particular someone knowing. That someone need not be a law enforcement agency, it could be as simple as a targeted advertising agency. That's cool, I don't like unwanted attention from people who I dislike either. What is not cool is the implicit demand that while using someone else's computers, you get to foist policy upon t

    3. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by coinreturn · · Score: 2

      Keep in mind that every person commits two felonies and dozens of misdemeanour's every day.

      [Citation needed]

    4. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by kumanopuusan · · Score: 1

      It's a paraphrase of Cardinal Richelieu, who not only made the following quote, but practiced what he described: "Show me six lines written by the most honest man in the world, and I will find enough therein to hang him."

      When the powerful can manipulate their societies into killing as they see fit, it's best to give them as little excuse as possible. The sitting US president claims that he can legally kill Americans on American soil without trial.

      --
      Use of the words "good", "bad" or "evil" is almost invariably the result of oversimplification.
    5. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > The sitting US president claims that he can legally kill Americans on American soil without trial.

      Given that the Westfall act allows the AG to request that any federal employee be granted immunity from prosecution for things they do in the employment of the government, I would say its been legal for a very long time. In fact, all federal employees are effectively above the law so long as the AG agrees.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    6. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 1

      If everything you do is tracked, you will get penalized for all af them, putting *everyone* in prison. Laws are there so that if somebody really crosses a boundary that society won't accept, there is a fair reason to put them trough court. If we start to automatically punish everyone for every crime they commit, because we give up privacy, our world stops functioning.

      Nearly 100% of current online commerce is easily trackable by dozens of agencies. Why isn't everyone in jail? Why hasn't the world stopped functioning?

    7. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by anagama · · Score: 1

      Three Felonies A Day, by Harvey Silverglate, Constitutional Lawyer:
      http://www.harveysilverglate.c...

      It is impossible to even count the number of Federal crimes:
      http://online.wsj.com/news/art...

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    8. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      Fail. The plural of anecdote is not data.

    9. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by anagama · · Score: 1

      Ah, the famous bullshit comeback used to avoid facing certain facts.

      The fact is that the Federal criminal code base has become so large that the human mind cannot remember it, and because of poorly documented agency rules, or merely weird agency interpretations of laws, it is not actually possible to even list all the laws one would have to memorize. Worse, the element of intent is often not even pertinent, and over time, more and more crimes devoid of the intent element are made.

      But of course, ignorance of the law is no excuse. How convenient, make an unknowable criminal code base, and punish people for not knowing it. Then convince idiots like yourself that the system is fair and justly applied so that your knee jerk reaction is to immediately dismiss all criticism, and smugly feel secure and safe in the system.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    10. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      No, my comment was about your first link. It has ANECDOTES about people committing three felonies a day. It does not contain any DATA to support the original claim of "...every person commits two felonies and dozens of misdemeanour's [sic] every day."

      And you jump to immediate name calling - such an elegant argument style you have.

    11. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The GP was off; it's actually closer to 3 felonies a day. Citation:
      http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052748704471504574438900830760842

    12. Re:reasons for anonimity are more than drugs by ShaunC · · Score: 1

      Assuming you're in the United States, you might be surprised what sort of laws are on the books. Things like spitting into a public trash can, having a porch light that shines into someone else's window, riding motorcycles two-wide on a roadway, setting out a D-CON rat poison trap in your back yard, drinking a beer in your own yard, not stopping to pick up and dispose of a squirrel that you hit with your vehicle, etc. are all illegal in certain places. Unless you've read your entire state code (Cornell has them online, take a couple of weeks to read yours) you have no clue how many laws you're breaking every day.

      --
      Thanks to the War on Drugs, it's easier to buy meth than it is to buy cold medicine!
  57. Should I post? by beatljuice · · Score: 0

    The lack of intelligence and excess of self centeredness in these comments makes me wonder if anyone here will understand my post. First off. Not all drug deals are "bad." My wife gets a horrible cough that has lasted for months at a time. There is a drug that works well for her, but she has to get a doctors permission (prescription) to be able to buy it. It would be a whole lot easier to just buy it on the DarkMarket. Most of you have probably never even questioned why the law says you have to get a doctors permission to use drugs. Have you? Maybe the laws regarding drugs are great, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't question them. Obviously everyone who's posted here lives in a relatively free "westernized" country. What about people that live in very restrictive cultures that want to buy perfectly reasonable items, but they can't in their country. What happens when your country starts to outlaw things they shouldn't? Just like a business in the free market needs competition so that it doesn't become a monopoly, we also need the underground to be competition for our laws. This reminds us to think.

    --
    Look for a reason to smile you jaded #*^ *(%$
    1. Re:Should I post? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 3, Informative

      Why do we need prescriptions to buy drugs?

      Drug resistance, drug abuse, personal danger taking some drugs with out any sort of warning or medical intervention?

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    2. Re:Should I post? by beatljuice · · Score: 1

      I specifically said "Maybe the laws regarding drugs are great." The use of perscriptions wasn't something I was arguing. I was arguing that we have become a little too trusting of those in authority when we don't even question such laws.

      --
      Look for a reason to smile you jaded #*^ *(%$
    3. Re:Should I post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do we need prescriptions to buy drugs?

      Drug resistance, drug abuse, personal danger taking some drugs with out any sort of warning or medical intervention?

      You seem to be under the impression that the above problems have caused more misery than the war on drugs itself.

    4. Re:Should I post? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      I was pointing out that I could name a few reasons off the top of my head why authorities control drugs the way they do.

      I agree, question authority. But there are stupid questions, and often too, stupid answers.

      There are some things that should be pretty goddamned self evident as being good ideas. Child labor, safe food and drugs, etc.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    5. Re:Should I post? by beatljuice · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't agree with you on the drugs. They should be legalized - if for no other reason than to quit spending valuable resources on victimless crimes. Plus legalizing drugs will reduce violence, make them safer (with regulation), and generate revenue through taxes.

      --
      Look for a reason to smile you jaded #*^ *(%$
    6. Re:Should I post? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      I was thinking of drugs as pharmaceuticals. I don't think though that all drugs are victimless.

      Meth, cocaine, heroin... incredibly addictive substances that really fuck with people's brains in the short to medium term. Tobacco might be highly addictive and destructive in the long term, but a pack of smokes isn't likely to drive you to break into someone's house and steal their valuables to pay for your habit.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    7. Re:Should I post? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      i was talking about pharmaceuticals. The war on drugs is horse shit, although I think that keeping some drugs like meth and crack if not illegal, then somehow regulated, is generally a good idea. These are not kind drugs.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    8. Re:Should I post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do we need prescriptions to buy drugs?

      Drug resistance, drug abuse, personal danger taking some drugs with out any sort of warning or medical intervention?

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxHesVkGjgs

  58. Shutting down doesn't make a difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really making it harder to shutdown doesn't make a difference. All they need to do is seed it with enough sting operations to make it useless. On the internet nobody knows you're a dog, or a FBI agent, or a dog FBI agent.

  59. Re: So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I take it you've never bought, nor priced prescription drugs on the black market. If you want to buy some Norcos which are extremely cheap from a US pharmacy, be prepared to get ass raped buying it on the black market. People are buying the drugs because they are addicts and they need it and are willing to pay a premium price to get some when their doctor shopping fails and they get cut off from their legal supply. People who are selling drugs are doing so because they want lots of money. Illegal imports from Canada will save the drug dealer money, but not his customer.

    And no, antibiotics are not the prescription drugs people want. They want pain killers, sedatives, and barbituates. That is what the silk road was for, not antibiotics.

  60. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Tom · · Score: 1

    While I agree in principle on the black market concept, you should also not forget about one small detail about the War on Drugs:

    It's a failure

    The target is right, but the method isn't. It's got all kinds of problems, but the most important one is that it has utterly and completely failed to reach its goal. Or even come close to it. It's like waging a war against terrorists hiding in Afghanistan and Pakistan by bombing Iraq... oh, wait...

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  61. please read about those softwares before posting t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for example, in bitcoin, it doesn not matter who created it. its open, and i know exactly how it works. if there will be a break-through story about satoshi nakamoto being actually the NSA, it would not matter to me. the elements of it won't change at all.
    because you know how it works, you don't need actually any trust in it. people who don't know how it works need the trust and believe.

  62. well, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you take privacy seriously, you would never use one computer for several tasks anyway.

    anyhow, imagine you wanna build a completely decentralized and anonymous platform, how would you do it? i think the scenario with a public code on each computer is OK, since currently it seems to be the only way actually.
    than, yes, there are problems not directly related to privacy such as strange code in your computer etc... but you can solve this easily, buy an old laptop on ebay only to install that particular software. things done.

  63. Re:Eeeehhhhhh - meanwhile in Europe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your entire presumption is terrible.

    "Most people"? The world is a lot bigger than the US, actually you even have a rather small population. Here in the Old World, cash is still king. Wanna know why? Because

    a) it's a cultural thing. We don't live "on credit" as much here.
    b) credit cards are expensive. Why should I pay someone for a service that saves me nothing but a trip to the bank (which for most people here, is at most a 5 minute walk away)
    c) we don't use CC as ID. We use an actual ID card that we're required to carry, but I know you see that as "papers please" policy.

    And you know what else? Armed robberies at gunpoint are rather rare here, because you know... there's just not a lot of guns. But i digress...

  64. Re:Like a note in the blockchain: 'dodgy stuff her by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It can be anonymous, tumble coins and your not going to find anyone. Think about it, if it was so easy how many people would they got with SR bust? they got hardly anybody. They get more people on the streets. They are not supposed to be anonymous, but they can be with a simple enough process.

  65. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    A rule of law system is based on the assumption that 'everyone kows the law'.
    The simple reality today is that there isn't a person alive who can honestly say he 'knows the law'.
    There are simply to much laws on the books, it is flatout impossible for any one person to even approach 'knowing the law' (hell, even if you make reading up on the law a fulltime job for the rest of your life, by the time you die there would be more laws you dindn't know then when you started, the current system is that insane)

    the legal profession sepperates laws in 'malum in se' and "malum prohibitum",
    'malum in se' are laws that can be argued from first principles, things that are bad in of themselves (e.g. rape, murder, assault, theft)
    'malum prohibitum' laws are illegal merely because the government said so, they're just a subtle form of mob rule

    If the powers that be are out to get you you're screwed, no matter how hard you try to color within the lines.
    Consequently I respect malum in se laws, malum prohibitum laws get no respect at all.

  66. Re:Like a note in the blockchain: 'dodgy stuff her by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That strikes me as much like writing 'I was used to buy drugs' on a $50 note except that someone can check the entire transaction history of the $50 note back to the beginning of time.

    That's not inherent to DarkMarket, that's inherent to bitcoin.

  67. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How on Earth does such a comment get modded Insightful on /.?

    It's not like these software is as big as the Linux kernel. Bitcoin protocol has been implemented from the ground up several times by different people into multiple competing implementations. Just checking out pieces of the code is much easier than this, and tens, if not hundreds of people do it constantly.

    Open-source. Try it.

  68. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Fredde87 · · Score: 1

    Drugs don't hurt anyone? So you think drug cartels who kill thousands of people every year to feed our western need for drugs don't hurt anyone? And you don't think the cost to our health systems to deal with substance abuse "hurts" or at least costs our society money (the victims being the ones who loose out because resources are instead spent on dealing with the problems caused by drugs)? The expression "there is no such thing as a victimless crime" is correct in almost all cases...

  69. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by sfcat · · Score: 1

    You are confusing the cost of the drugs and the cost of the prohibition of drugs. Its a bit like molesting someone and then complaining that they aren't stable later in life.

    --
    "Those that start by burning books, will end by burning men."
  70. the good side? by godt · · Score: 1

    That's true. But I think there would be a few Swiss bankers interested in this. And - perhaps on the more principled side - some people who are trying to send cash to their families in Botswana (for example) from their place of employ in Dubai (for example) and enthusiastic about avoiding charges from Western Union (for example).

  71. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you never know. A good honeypot will be something that actually works. Most of the code open - you get trust. And in some "upgrade" you slip in a binary blob. Doable even in open source - and odd-looking png perhaps. But it is the (binary) code that silently logs your transactions and real identity.

    Just sitting on this small database of evidence, encrypted so you can't see what it is. And similiar to a botnet or virus, it has an activation date when it will upload and rat you out.

    And it won't matter that much if you have some security measures against this, for the people you trade with are not necessarily as good on security.

    Also, this does not prevent traditional stings. Police can pose as"interested parties", buying and selling through the system. Building up some reputation before busting. Possibly also using accounts forced or coerced from arrested people, using their reputation. There are always someone willing to tear down what others build. For the hell of it, or for the get-out-of-prison card. It is easier to squeal for the anonymous, there won't be a gorilla coming after them. And anonymity cannot be preserved both ways - you can perhaps move bitcoins with perfect anonymity - but you can't transfer dope over the internet.Someone has to move the stuff. Mail & delivery companies will tell the police where they picked up the innocent-looking package, they can then watch that mailbox/postoffice for repeat business. Police dogs sniffing new packages...

  72. Re:Eeeehhhhhh - meanwhile in Europe... by AGMW · · Score: 1
    With you up until the the ID card stuff. Whilst our (UK) Gov. (Previous nuLab and current Con) seem to keep trying to foist ID cards on us we've been able to stop them so far. Odd that both nuLab and Con have both been mostly against it whilst in opposition, then seem all gung-ho for ID cards when they get voted in. Makes you wonder what the hell changes when they get the keys to No 10!

    So I too see ID Cards in that very "papers please" light. They are a tool that gives power to the Gov and adds nothing to the people forced to carry them. Just Say No!

    --
    Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
    handmadehands.co.uk
  73. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A law has to be very, very wrong to have a moral mandate to break

    Nope, not "very very wrong". Just "wrong". But please note the difference between "wrong" law and "irritating inconvenient law".

    If you base your morality on law, you're morally corrupt. It should be the other way around - laws based on ethics. And obeying based on morality.

    If you follow a wrong law "because that is convenient", then consider people 70 years ago who dutifully reported jews "because that was the law then". Not the party,police & fanatics who wanted such reporting, but the civilians who merely obeyed that system. "It's the law! For its own sake!"

  74. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

    but harm no one but arguably yourself.

    Seems to me that your "but" implies that "harm no one" is false.

    Now, arguably, harming yourself is not anyone else's business. On the other hand, leaving society to clean up after you is society's business....

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  75. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    A law has to be very, very wrong to have a moral mandate to break it. Most people breaking laws out of "principle" are just doing it because they find the law inconvenient. Laws and rules are the oil of social machinery. Don't be the sand in the crankcase.

    Quite the opposite. Lawbreakers are going out of their way, taking a huge risk, to make a point.

    The mindless drones who equate lawful with moral are the ones taking the easy way out, avoiding the inconvenience of having to use reason and logic and truth and reality to factor into their decisions.

    Laws and rules are the oil of social machinery.

    You can keep your machines, I prefer my human beings. You shouldn't be mechanizing anyone. That's not your job as a person. It is your job to side with the human spirit.

  76. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Historically, black markets have not been used for banned books. Tell me honestly - do you think "purchasing banned books" will be a thing that will ever happen on DarkMarket?

    Do you have any proof for your claim, or are you just making things up?

    Historically, it got dark last night.

    So it was never sunny, and it never will be again, right?

  77. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You disagree with a law doesn't give you a moral right to break it.

    No, the morality comes from never agreed to be bound by the law in the first place.

    Telling people they are only law breaking because they "disagree" is a red herring,
    to confuse them into believing they accepted the "rule of law" they were born into.

    You will have to do better than that, I'm afraid.

  78. Total NONSENSE. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is total nonsense. As stated, "an escrow system that protects the cash until it is confirmed that the buyer has received their product."

    As well as "it would still run without any assistance from site administrators,".

    And if no one is at the helm who decides what to do when the buyer doesn't acknowledge receipt or a dispute occurs?

    Nothing, which means nothing happens, and the seller is screwed! LOL

  79. Application vs. server by Dancindan84 · · Score: 1

    I might be missing something, but isn't it usually easier to get a back door into software than to seize a server? Reading the articles it's using or piggybacking on P2P, but you have to get the software from -somewhere- initially, and I assume there will be updates. Even if those updates are pushed out via the integrated P2P network, I'd imagine there's still ways they could compromise it. And wouldn't the tracking of user names make things more dangerous should the software be compromised?

    --
    "Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much." - Oscar Wilde
  80. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd like to expand on a point in your second paragraph. It seems to be often forgotten.

    Illegal of course covers "causing harm to someone", but it also covers "harm to society". If one paints graffiti on a public park wall. No single individual is harmed, the park is not a single individual's property. However, the society as a whole is harmed because the park is held "in trust" of the people by the government.

    Victim-less crimes are not always victim-less. Often they victimize people by proxy, or by indirect ways that are difficult to directly measure. Sometimes those connections are based on correlation instead of causation; but, if you look, there is a victim, it's called society.

    To make the obligatory horrible car example, a person driving unsafely in traffic due to excessive lane changes, undue acceleration and braking, and other aggressive maneuvers need not actually hit another car before society feels that law enforcement should intervene. In the event that their driving behavior was provably that of a person who raised the risk of accident in the other unknowns on the road, they might even be successfully prosecuted. Yes, by some it is a victim-less crime; however, if you are on the road with such a person, your are victim to the fear and added risk that such a driver presents. Added fear and risk are sometimes enough to form a law, and thank goodness. If it were not, threats of bodily harm would be legal, a consequence we likely wouldn't enjoy.

  81. Amazon.com for drugs by darby+smurf+rules · · Score: 1

    "Oh, crap. This site was actually seized by the FBI. So come on."

  82. Tom = multiple /. sockpuppet using scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's let TOM speak shall we:

    "I'm having great conversations on this site with one of my alias accounts" - by Tom (822) on Monday April 07, 2014 @02:29PM (#46686259) Homepage

    FROM -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    APK

    P.S.=> Tom *tried* to libel me & failed after I destroyed him in a technical debate on hosts files... result?

    Tom ended up "eating his words" here http://slashdot.org/comments.p... spiced with "the bitter taste of SELF-defeat" + HIS FOOT IN HIS MOUTH

    ... apk

    1. Re:Tom = multiple /. sockpuppet using scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get help, dude. Seriously.

    2. Re:Tom = multiple /. sockpuppet using scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude. I told you. Get help!

    3. Re:Tom = multiple /. sockpuppet using scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take your own advice Tom (posting by ac).

  83. Tom = multiple /. sockpuppet using scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's let TOM speak shall we:

    "I'm having great conversations on this site with one of my alias accounts" - by Tom (822) on Monday April 07, 2014 @02:29PM (#46686259) Homepage

    FROM -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    APK

    P.S.=> Tom *tried* to libel me & failed after I destroyed him in a technical debate on hosts files... result?

    Tom ended up "eating his words" here http://slashdot.org/comments.p... spiced with "the bitter taste of SELF-defeat" + HIS FOOT IN HIS MOUTH

    ... apk

  84. Re:Dit duh duh duh by darby+smurf+rules · · Score: 1

    Well, duh, Slashdotters. I guess that the Silk Road is 1.5x worse than the strongest storm last year (Haiyan).

  85. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember this?

    http://yro-beta.slashdot.org/story/03/07/17/190232/directv-sues-anyone-who-bought-smartcard-reader

    Or what about Melanotan or other "illegal" drugs that aren't narcotics, just.. chemical compounds that is not approved.

    People should have the right to buy stuff from complete strangers on the internet and inject it into their body fat! ;-)

  86. Tom = multiple /. sockpuppet using scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's let TOM speak shall we:

    "I'm having great conversations on this site with one of my alias accounts" - by Tom (822) on Monday April 07, 2014 @02:29PM (#46686259) Homepage

    FROM -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    APK

    P.S.=> Tom *tried* to libel me & failed after I destroyed him in a technical debate on hosts files... result?

    Tom ended up "eating his words" here http://slashdot.org/comments.p... spiced with "the bitter taste of SELF-defeat" + HIS FOOT IN HIS MOUTH

    ... apk

  87. Tom = multiple /. sockpuppet using scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's let TOM speak shall we:

    "I'm having great conversations on this site with one of my alias accounts" - by Tom (822) on Monday April 07, 2014 @02:29PM (#46686259) Homepage

    FROM -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    APK

    P.S.=> Tom *tried* to libel me & failed after I destroyed him in a technical debate on hosts files... result?

    Tom ended up "eating his words" here http://slashdot.org/comments.p... spiced with "the bitter taste of SELF-defeat" + HIS FOOT IN HIS MOUTH

    ... apk

  88. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by sFurbo · · Score: 1

    Remember, if AZT was in trials during the time period - if it had been found to have fatal side effects, there wouldn't be an oscar-winning movie about the guy... or if there were, he would be the bad guy. He wanted to make money, he got lucky. It happens.

    Woodruff WAS the bad guy who smuggled non-effective medicine. He SHOULD have been the bad guy of the movie: "Worse, the real Woodruff rejected the one truly promising drug at the time, AZT, as hopelessly toxic and instead smuggled drugs like Peptide T, which never panned out. " (from Science Based Medicine).

  89. Re:Eeeehhhhhh - meanwhile in Europe... by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

    Points a) and b) are not as prevalent as you'd think - Americans don't all 'live on credit'. You do see a lot of card-based transactions, but they're either debit transactions or credit transactions of convenience. I'm not sure what the UK equivalent is, but funds I spend via my debit card (looks just like a credit card; even has Visa on it) come directly from my bank account linked to that card. It's like a card-based check (cheque to you). Debit card volume in the US exceeds credit card usage.

    The other thing you see is people using their credit card to make purchases to get 'points' or other rewards. Personally I don't bother with that, since the CC companies are betting that you'll 1) forget to pay off your balance on time, 2) let the points expire, or 3) earn fewer points than the yearly cost of the card. I only have CC's with no annual fee, and I don't have time to bother with balance-juggling.

    --
    Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  90. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by sFurbo · · Score: 1

    The original question was "Why should this exist?", so direct your complaint to the GPP.

  91. Burner by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Several things:

    1) If you are spending large amounts of money, picking up a 2-300 netbook or websurfer as a burner PC isn't really a big deal. You only use it for that activity. Bonus is you can lock it down with encryption etc... without interfering with your normal PC.
    2) It may be about illegal activities, but not all illegal activities are illegal everywhere. Not all illegal drugs are cocaine or meth. Maybe you want to buy a generic cancer treatment drug from India that costs 200$ rather than 5,000$ dollars, but it is illegal because it is patented in your country of residence...

  92. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because legal and moral are not the same thing. Because legal and right are not the same thing. Because the means of defining those things have been taken from the people.

  93. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...the main reason people will use this is to buy things that are illegal, for uses that are likely to cause harm to someone..."

    What I think people like you fail to realize is that while that may be true, that doesn't mean we aren't justified in wanting to use it to buy legitimate stuff. For example, I can buy a firearm at a gun show and not have to register it. Wouldn't it be nice to have that gun shipped to my door? Or what if I want to buy some kick ass weed that my dispensary doesn't carry? Perhaps I want to support my cousin who sells weed, rather than the local dispensary.

    Also, like others have mentioned, not everything that is legal today will be legal tomorrow and the government is developing a nasty habit of retroactively prosecuting people for stuff and it appears to be headed further in that direction. Weed sales today are okay (in some states) but who knows what will happen when Muslims run our country and decide that we are all infidels and deserve to die for our transgressions?

    Stop acting like we can't already buy shit like underage prostitutes and guns off the street with cash. A "DarkMarket" is really only another place to buy "whatever the hell you want." It doesn't mean that we can't still get it elsewhere.

  94. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by aaaaaaargh! · · Score: 1

    Do you think this piece of software existed for more than a few seconds before it was fed to a DA and analyzed 'til it croaked?

    Yes.

  95. Drug users aren't people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's stop reporting what's going on with the zombified former humans we call drug addicts.

  96. Re:Eeeehhhhhh - meanwhile in Europe... by kyrsjo · · Score: 1

    I'm also in Europe, but probably not exactly the same place as you. But having been to the US many times, I agree that there are a lot of cultural differences, and I suspect most Europeans are much more aware of these differences than most Americans.

    At least in Norway, which is my home country, debit cards are the norm when paying for things - the only places I generally pay cash is when I get a beer from the beer-fridge at the room of the student orchestra I'm sometimes hanging out with in the basement of my university. Basically everything else is plastic. These cards are *not* expensive to use. They are also the main form of ID for people without a driver's license - which includes *a lot* of young people in the cities, as cars are (due to taxes) very expensive to buy, own and run, but public transport is quite good.

    France, where I currently live, debit cards are also very common. You use cash when buying a coffee at a café or a beer at the pub or a bread at the bakery, but not when getting groceries etc. Public transport isn't so good tough, but cars are cheap, so people drive almost everywhere.

    Switzerland, which happens to be 1-2 km from where I live - I cross this border multiple times per day, often on a pedal bike if the weather is nice as it takes less time than going by car + a nice free exercise to get me going in the morning - is a bit different. Here a lot of places don't accept cards, so you need to carry a lot more cash. Public transport is, again, quite good. Speaking of ID, I've only once been asked for it at the border (having crossed it probably thousands of times).

    And since you mention it: Neither places are armed robberies considered a big problem. The whole "needing a gun to protect yourself" culture is extremely alien to us. It's not that guns are rare - both Norway and Switzerland is quite high on the statistics of gun ownership - but they are used for hunting, by the military, and for target shooting. Thus pistols and similar "concealable" weapons are rare, while hunting rifles, shotguns, and often full-auto military rifles (now usually without some small but hard to manufacture and vital piece) are common.

  97. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    Yea, remotely possible, but there are just too many eyes on the Tor project to make it realistically likely.

    If we can't trust even the most thoroughly reviewed projects, then we really can't trust anything except burning brands and pitchforks as tools of political change.

    --
    I hate printers.
  98. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Bodhammer · · Score: 1

    "As soon as you decided to trade with someone else, you potentially infringed on someone else" - I don't understand, please elaborate about how two parties trading infringe on a third party.

    --
    "I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
  99. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    fortress linux had already found heartbleed during an audit of the source code.

    https://twitter.com/fortresslinux

    but your statement probably holds true for most gnu/linux distros.

  100. Biochips and The Black Market by docwatson223 · · Score: 1

    In an era where segments of the population would refuse to take The Chip for religious or political reasons, they would have no choice but to turn to something like Dark Market to conduct daily commerce, find work, and otherwise function on a barter system.

  101. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By participating in a black market, even to buy something innocuous, you are no longer "law-abiding". Black markets, like any markets, are motivated by profits, not altruism. Anyone who expects truth and righteousness from economic activity would be, to borrow a phrase, stupid and naive. Anyone who attempts to correlate law with truth and righteousness is a koolaid-drinking fool.

    Centralizing systems can increase efficiency. However its downsides include: no redundancies (single point of failure), big-tent systems poorly serve diverse needs of a ever growing pool of people (one size fits all... sort of), and it provides a ready made avenue for abuse of authority ("I see that you are into midget-scat porn, senator. Please vote Y on bill Z or this may find its way into the press").

    In that last, example the senator my not even be browsing questionable materials. It works just as well if the general population believe it is possible, and with a centralized system in place, they will believe.

  102. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You don't buy a black market gun in the US"

    why not, dumbass? there are teenagers in inner cities all over this country that buy black market guns just to make sure they aren't shot/other by rival teenagers (usually race and/or gang based). you know, cities where 100's of thousands of mexicans migrate to or spawn in every year? or where the federal gov has built concrete zoos and called them public housing developments... not everyone grew up in your self righteous dilusion.

  103. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by docwatson223 · · Score: 1

    "You disagree with a law doesn't give you a moral right to break it." Civil Rights would have died a quiet death if this was true; we have an obligation to ignore or break immoral laws, unjust legislation, and government oppression and over reach and we should do so through peaceful means until that option is untenable and the moral requirment to invoke the 2nd Amendment comes to play.

  104. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A law has to be mostly wrong to have a moral mandate to break it. Most people supporting laws out of "principle" are just doing it because they have no independent ideas about justice. Laws and rules are comforting to people who imagine they're in charge. Don't tread on me.

    FTFY

  105. Confusing morality and legality again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I couldn't disagree more. Not liking a law is a good reason to consider breaking it. If you believe that the act is ethical, then you need only weigh up the probability of being caught and the likely punishment against your desire to perform the act.

    Consequently, two legitimate uses of this technology would be drug dealing and tax evasion.

  106. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by kumanopuusan · · Score: 1

    Did you mean intersection?

    --
    Use of the words "good", "bad" or "evil" is almost invariably the result of oversimplification.
  107. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by Beerdood · · Score: 1

    Well you gotta take the good with the bad with the DarkMarket. Sure, maybe a Dallas Buyer's Club scenario might seem more legitimate to the average person (or a market for any legitimate pharmaceutical drugs at lower prices because a huge markup in Europe / North America). But what about all the other nasty, illegal stuff will this be used for? The creators of this can't control the goods and services that are sold any more than the creators of bittorrent can control the files being transferred around.

    Sure, maybe some drugs seem harmless and you can argue they're a victimless crime or whatever. What about all the other insidious shit out there that this will be used to peddle? CP, hit-man & assassination services, weapons, slavery, identity theft and stolen credit cards... surely the concept of DarkMarket opens up a new market for all these types of transactions too - you can't expect these services to be somehow excluded. In my utilitarianism-based opinion; this is a far greater harm than good for the world; the benefits of being able to buy some recreational drugs or make purchases anonymously is heavily outweighed by giving the rich the ability to put out a hit some some journalist with a dissenting opinion (with a much lower chance of being caught than without this service), or a new market for CP, etc..

    I wish the creators of this project would realize this. Maybe this is just somehow acceptable in the worldview of the anarchist or the libertarian-leaning types. Or maybe it's morally rationalized by some thoughts on the lines of "Hey, I didn't kill those thousands of people! I only sold those guns to that corrupt African warlord" or "I only helped create the software that assist people making illegal transactions, I didn't actually sell or make that CP" and somehow absolve themselves from guilt because they're not the ones making the transaction. I might not agree with the current laws on drugs, but I certainly don't support this project.

    --
    Global warming and other natural disasters are a direct effect of the shrinking number of pirates - Gospel of the FSM
  108. Not two felonies but three by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Keep in mind that every person commits two felonies and dozens of misdemeanour's every day.

    [Citation needed]

    http://www.threefeloniesaday.com/Youtoo/tabid/86/Default.aspx

    http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052748704471504574438900830760842

  109. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by jazzdude00021 · · Score: 1

    then we really can't trust anything except burning brands and pitchforks as tools of political change.

    sarcasm:
    But what if the NSA has bugged the pitchforks in some vast conspiracy with the pitchfork industry? I also heard from [source of dubious credibility] that they were putting a backdoor kill-switch in burning brands. And don't get me started on the homemade devices crowd, they're just [NSA, CIA, FBI, etc.] front men.... wake up sheeple! end sarcasm

    Seriously. Either you have to believe that the government secretly runs everything or else you have to admit that something might just be genuinely homegrown and therefore not a government plant. I can't say I know everything about the inner workings of the NSA etc. I can say that if they are as organized and efficient as your average DMV (who are also a government organization with access to massive amounts of computer technology), we're all gunna be just fine.

    But hey, that's just my opinion as dictated to me by the chem-trails I inhaled this morning. Now if you'll excuse me I'm off to cash my check from the [insert name of your favorite world-controlling organization here].

  110. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

    I can attest -- Lawdy, Lawdy -- that the drug prohibition laws are far more expensive than any possible effect of the drugs themselves. Marijuana, for example, is in no way as bad for your health as being arrested for possessing marijuana. Its direct cost to a user -- once all of the artificial price increase associated with it being illegal is removed -- is orders of magnitude less costly than the complex mix of legal expenses to the user and the state, the cost of enforcing the law, and of course the cost of punishing (usually incarcerating) the user if they are caught with anything less than a tiny amount of the substance. The cost of drug laws worldwide is credibly estimated to be in the hundreds of billions of dollars -- say half a trillion. One could feed the hungry and bring about World Peace if one diverted all of this insanely spent money to other purposes and just let drug users use drugs, with fairly benign restrictions on what they can do while they are doing so.

    Even the really bad, scary, truly dangerous drugs are in some sense self-limiting in proportion to their danger. Heroin is mighty bad, and extremely addicting. Like tobacco, only not quite as addicting. But if heroin were inexpensive and legal, instead of being horrendously expensive and illegal, an entire shadow government and underworld would be instantly starved for money and would wither and die, and heroin addicts would be no worse off trying to work and manage their lives with a daily fix of cheap heroin than they would be with a daily fix of expensive methadone. They'd have about the same chance of getting tired of it and deciding to kick the addiction, or maybe even a greater one if we spent a tiny bit of the money we wouldn't be spending in the war on heroin on free addiction treatment programs and public education.

    People who end up fond of much worse combos -- PCP plus cocaine plus heroin -- well, I'm sure that it is really bad for them, but for better or worse that sort of thing will very likely kill them quickly, and even that is comparatively cheap compared to the lifetime costs of arresting them, putting them into prison for decades where they contract HIV and come out real criminals with a whole lot of anger and a expensive chronic diseases to manage while still not being over whatever it was that cause them to be a hard core addict in the first place.

    Drug cartels, my friend, exist because drugs are illegal. Legalize pretty much everything, and "cartels" vanish overnight. We've already been through this once -- Prohibition was the best thing that ever happened to organized crime in the US, at least until drug prohibition came along with an even higher profit margin. Lose the prohibition, empty the prisons of all drug offenders who don't have an associated violent crime tagged on, and watch crime rates, murder rates, the number of police in our police state, the number of lawyers (drug laws being a huge boon to lawyers, of course) and courts, all plummet. There isn't any real money in drugs without the prohibition -- anybody can grow pot in their back yard, cocaine would cost a few dollars a pound if it weren't for drug laws, heroin ditto. And most people would still avoid both of these, because both of them are pretty dangerous and addiction or life problems associated with them would be expensive and embarrassing, just as they are now for smokers and alcoholics.

    rgb

    --
    Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
  111. Re:So go ahead - what are the legitimate uses of t by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

    No real argument, but next we're going to be referencing "The Tragedy of the Commons" and "The Tyranny of Democracy" and related works. Human society works because we all make certain trade-offs of our personal freedom against our security. If we were rational, we would actually do a cost-benefit analysis of our legal system to determine whether it makes more sense to eliminate (for example) intellectual property laws, making it perfectly legal to copy any work or produce anything we know how to produce, or maintain any variant of the existing IP laws. Sadly, we're not. But a lot of the drug laws -- pot in particular -- are low hanging fruit. There is really no question that it costs far more to keep pot illegal than it ever could cost society legal.

    rgb

    --
    Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
  112. Re:Like a note in the blockchain: 'dodgy stuff her by gnoshi · · Score: 1

    It's an interesting idea, but if you could do that then the transaction information attached by DarkMarket would not be valuable/useful because it would be possible to forge that information. Otherwise a good idea, though.

  113. Re:Like a note in the blockchain: 'dodgy stuff her by gnoshi · · Score: 1

    Was the goal of the SR bust to get the individual dealers though? Tumbling is an interesting way of obscuring the source, although I don't imagine it will be terribly long before you start seeing tumbler operators going to gaol for money laundering (which is exactly what they are doing). There are also a range of limitations to tumbling: it is only effective if there are BCs from numerous sources, and no individual has a disproportionately large number of BCs in the pool (otherwise he/she will just wind up with a disproportionately large number of their own BCs).
    It isn't impossible to track a transaction through a tumbler, although it is difficult (which is how it is possible for people like this to hunt BC thieves, but that needs real-time intervention).

    But yeah, tumblers can provide some level of anonymity to those who do use them.

  114. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by gweihir · · Score: 1

    I think you are getting the time-line wrong here.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  115. Drugs are normal animal instinct by tomachi · · Score: 1

    Taking mind altering drugs is normal human and animal instinct. You mentioned you take legal mind altering substances so that's pretty hypocritical to say illegal ones are any different considering the basis of their illegality is not based in logic or science.

  116. Re:People are willing to trust some random softwar by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    What if those well known anti-Govt types are double agents? What if those disparate people and orgs mostly have the same paymaster? I appreciate I'm venturing into tinfoil hat territory here, but prior to Edward Snowden if you told me what the NSA were capable of I would've have laughed in your face. It's not that hard if you have the resources. Setup a few thousand high bandwidth TOR exit nodes and analyse everything that goes through them. Run a few BTC wallets/exchanges/mixers, and setup a few dealer accounts on Silk Road and collect all the transactions and addresses you are sending illegal contraband to. Based on what I've seen the NSA have the capability to do this with their eyes closed. It's really only a matter of if they have the intent.

  117. Tom = multiple /. sockpuppet using scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's let TOM speak shall we:

    "I'm having great conversations on this site with one of my alias accounts" - by Tom (822) on Monday April 07, 2014 @02:29PM (#46686259) Homepage

    FROM -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    APK

    P.S.=> Tom *tried* to libel me & failed after I destroyed him in a technical debate on hosts files... result?

    Tom ended up "eating his words" here http://slashdot.org/comments.p... spiced with "the bitter taste of SELF-defeat" + HIS FOOT IN HIS MOUTH

    ... apk

  118. Re:Eeeehhhhhh - meanwhile in Europe... by delt0r · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of guns in Europe. Austria you only have to be over 18 to buy rifles. CC is less common but i know of several people that had CC and did carry. I am now it Switzerland and well i know of quite a few gun owners here to.

    Gun crime is not related to gun ownership from the statistics anyway.

    --
    If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  119. Re:Eeeehhhhhh - meanwhile in Europe... by delt0r · · Score: 1

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    South park never lies.

    --
    If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?