by Scotty Hendricks
December 03,
2020
from
BigThink Website
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Despite its reputation as a tool for criminals, only
a small percentage of Tor users were actually going
to the dark web.
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The rate was higher in free countries and lower in
countries with censored Internet access.
-
The findings are controversial, and may be limited
by their methodology to be general assumptions.
A new study finds
that some people
just want privacy...
Various parts of the Internet have earned stereotypes about how
people use them.
Some of these are
warranted, and some are mere caricatures. Perhaps no section of the
Internet is less pleased with its stereotype than the Tor Network,
which must contend with being blamed for every crime that originates
on the Internet.
However, a new study (The
potential harms of the Tor anonymity networkcluster
disproportionately in free countries) shows that
the dark web isn't quite as
dark as you might think.
A group of researchers
led by
Eric Jardine of Virginia
Tech suggest that only 6.7 percent of global Tor users are going
to sites for what are likely malicious reasons.
What do half
of those words mean?
For those who don't spend all of their time on the Internet, a few
of these terms might be new to you. We'll go over them first before
we continue.
If you do know all of
these terms, you can skip ahead to the next section.
-
Surface Web:
The regular
Internet that you can find with a search engine. You're on
it right now; unless these articles are shared in places we
don't know about.
-
Deep Web:
The part of the
Internet not indexed by search engines.
This includes
things like your email inbox; you can't get there from
Google or Bing, but instead have to enter a password to find
it from another page.
You've probably
visited the deep web today, too.
-
Dark Web:
A subsection of
the deep web that requires special software to access.
While not
everything there is bad, there are social media sites, email
services, hidden forums, and even puzzle games down there;
this is also where you would find the places for illegal
markets and other, extremely nefarious, things.
-
Tor:
A kind of
software that allows users to browse the Internet in
near-total anonymity.
It does this by
encrypting connection data and scrambling the route a
computer takes to connect to a site, thus making it
difficult, but not impossible, to find who is using a
particular website.
The potential
value of this to criminals should be evident to you.
While it often gets bad
press for how it can be used for illicit purposes, it should be said
it was created and used by the United States government for often
banal purposes.
The leaders of the
Tor Project often remind the public
that "normal people" use Tor for everyday Internet activities as
well.
As a personal example, I once used it to get around the
Great Firewall of China when I
wanted to get to the regular, uncensored Internet.
Back to the study
The study observed the final destination of a random selection of
Tor users to determine if they went to surface websites or more
hidden areas of the Internet after connecting to the Tor network.
This was done by
monitoring the data from entry points in the Tor network, which
would allow an observer to where someone was going, but not who.
Those going to surface websites were assumed just to be using Tor
for anonymity and security, while those going into the dark web were
presumed more likely to be using it for illegal reasons.
Despite the popular conception of Tor as a tool for criminals
looking to cover their tracks, only 6.7 percent of these users went
to sites defined as the dark web, which were themselves not
necessarily devoted to illegal activity.
The results were further broken down by country, which revealed
another layer of information. The authors noted that in countries
deemed "not free" by
Freedom House, the rate of
possible malicious use goes down to 4.8 percent.
In countries considered
free, the percentage nearly doubles to 7.8 percent.
What does this
mean for the Internet?
The
dark web might be a little
lighter than previously suggested.
While it is true that
there is some horrible stuff down there, this study suggests the
people getting to it using the Tor network are mostly using it for
legal, and perhaps even banal, purposes.
This interpretation is
additionally supported by the difference in usage across countries
judged free and not free.
In those countries with
censorship, where a variety of tools must be used to get to sites
like Facebook or Wikipedia, the percentage of users
going towards locations on the dark web was smaller.
The authors conclude:
"The Tor anonymity
network can be used for both licit and illicit purposes. Our
results provide a clear, if probabilistic, estimation of the
extent to which users of Tor engage in either form of activity.
Generally, users of
Tor in politically 'free' countries are significantly more
likely to be using the network in likely illicit ways."
Additionally, they
mention that the Tor network's infrastructure is predominately in
free countries, which then see higher rates of its use to reach
places that could advance illegal activities.
This find may be of
interest to policymakers looking to balance the promotion of
autonomy and the freedom of information with the goal of preventing
crime.
What’s the
catch?
It has been suggested that the Internet is the first thing humanity
ever created that we don't fully understand.
If that is true, it
should surprise no one that there are objections to the methods used
to study it.
The executive director of the Tor Project,
Isabela Bagueros, explained
their objection to the study's methodology and assumptions to Ars
Technica:
"The authors of this
research paper have chosen to categorize all .onion sites and
all traffic to these sites as "illicit" and all traffic on the
"Clear Web" as 'licit.'
This assumption is flawed...
Many popular
websites, tools, and services use
onion services to offer privacy
and censorship-circumvention benefits to their users.
For example,
Facebook offers an onion
service.
Global news
organizations, including,
-
The New York
Times
-
BBC
-
Deutsche
Welle
-
Mada Masr
-
Buzzfeed,
...offer onion
services.
-
Whistleblowing platforms
-
Filesharing
tools
-
Messaging
apps
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VPNs
-
Browsers
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Email
services
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Free software
projects,
...also use onion
services to offer privacy protections to their users, including,
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Riseup
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OnionShare
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SecureDrop
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GlobaLeaks
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ProtonMail
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Debian
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Mullvad VPN
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Ricochet
Refresh
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Briar
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Qubes OS...
Writing off traffic
to these widely-used sites and services as "illicit" is a
generalization that demonizes people and organizations who
choose technology that allows them to protect their privacy and
circumvent censorship.
In a world of
increasing
surveillance capitalism
and Internet censorship, online privacy is necessary for
many of us to exercise our human rights to freely access
information, share our ideas, and communicate with one another.
Incorrectly
identifying all onion service traffic as "illicit" harms the
fight to protect encryption and benefits the powers that be that
are trying to weaken or entirely outlaw strong privacy
technology."
The critique here is
justified:
there are legitimate
websites hidden behind layers of security which were deemed
"illicit" by this study's methods.
Many people are just
trying to protect their anonymity when using them.
However, the study's
authors based their assumption on previous studies that demonstrate
that these hidden sites are used for illegal activities at a higher
rate than other parts of the Internet.
Until a more rigorous and ethically ambiguous method of determining
what people using the network are doing on these dark websites is
utilized, the findings of studies like this will be general and
based on broad assumptions.
Despite all of this, we can take a few things from this study:
-
most people using
Tor to explore the Internet aren't using it for evil
-
those using it in
places with limited freedom of information are even less
likely to use it for such purposes
-
external factors
can have significant impacts on how people use a tool such
as the Internet...
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