This is the authoritative 2021 guide to the Dark Web
If you are looking to understand:
- The Dark Web basics
- Where did the Dark Web come from?
- What’s driving the growth of the Dark Web?
- What activities take place on the Dark Web?
- Which Dark Web threats can impact my organisation?
- How to protect organisations from Dark Web activity?
- What does Dark Web Monitoring do?
Then this guide will provide you with all of the answers you need.
Chapter 1: The Dark Web basics
What is the Dark Web?
The Dark Web is a peer-to-peer interconnected network of computers that use the Tor Protocol, commonly known as the Tor browser.
Tor uses the top-level domain .onion which takes its name from the method of routing the Tor network’s users.
Anonymity is maintained by building a circuit each time a user tries to connect to a certain .onion domain.
The circuit becomes a multi-layered encryption chain, with each layer unwrapping the next one until it gets to its destination. Hence the reference to an onion.
This method ensures that the relaying nodes on the network between sender and recipient never know who the other one is. They only know the next layer as they unwrap it.
It provides 100% anonymity whilst on the network.
The Dark Web is essentially the containing of that encrypted traffic within the Dark Web itself.
Is the Dark Web 100% anonymous?
There are only 2 places where you can breach Dark Web anonymity.
Either the client end before you transmit data onto the Tor network or via the other end using an Open Relay.
Anyone can download and install an Open Relay and capture information then pass it out onto the internet if the data hasn’t been sufficiently secured within itself.
Chapter 2: Where did the Dark Web come from?
The Tor Project is an open-source foundation that was started as a US Navy research project.
It was originally part of the National Security Agency, a national-level intelligence agency of the United States Department of Defense.
It’s likely that it predates its official launch by a number of years.
The early development of the .onion protocol was designed to allow spies to communicate with each other and contact their commanders via the internet in as safe and secure a manner as possible.
For it to work properly, they needed a sufficient number of nodes in order to allow traffic to pass anonymously.
Too few nodes would simply allow adversaries to intercept and attack their encrypted data.
So (the story goes) the Tor Project was started as a free open source project to encourage widespread use.
It has become increasingly popular over the years and undergone a number of significant iterations since its release in 2002.
Chapter 3: What’s driving the growth of the Dark Web?
The Tor Project quickly gained users thanks to its advanced anonymity properties.
Let’s face it, you build a road and people are going to start driving on it.
Yet here’s the thing:
There are numerous key global events that have seen spikes in growth of Tor.
These include the following:
- Government clampdowns on file sharing following successful lobbying by Hollywood and the music industry forcing ISPs to block access to torrent hosting websites
- Key political moments such the Arab Spring in 2010
Meanwhile, various Hacking Communities began using it because it became the ‘cool thing’ to do.
Chapter 4: What activities take place on the Dark Web?
Most of the activity taking place on the Dark Web is as dull and trivial as the rest of the Internet.
In truth, for all its negative connotations the Dark Web shouldn’t be something to be afraid of.
Of the 95,317 sites we currently track, less than 5% are flagged as having potentially abusive content on them.
However:
There is also a significant amount of fraud taking place here, along with a percentage sharing abusive content.
The biggest threat to organisations comes in the form of Ransomware.
What is Ransomware?
Ransomware is the process of hackers encrypting and stealing sensitive company and customer data then ransoming it back to the organisation for profit.
Let’s look at this in more detail in the next chapter.
Chapter 5: Which Dark Web threats could impact my organisation?
In June 2017, the chief technology and information officer for Maersk, a Danish shipping and logistics giant, returned from his honeymoon to discover that the company has suffered a major malware attack.
The attack on its IT systems was so bad that the company was virtually unable to operate, even to the point that its ship’s captains were forced to navigate the globe using paper and pen.
4 years later and the company is still remediating, estimated costs to date are as much as £300 million.
No one is sure whether this attack was Ransomware gone wrong (no public request for payment has been made) but the damage to its business continues to be felt to this day.
The different types of Dark Web attack
The Dark Web enables hackers to remain anonymous whilst providing them with a marketplace to force you as the victim to pay to have your data decrypted.
It gives them a foothold, a place where they can publicly advertise to the world all of the organisations they have hacked.
This data often includes intellectual property, financial information, and customer data and is usually placed on the Dark Web and made free to download until the organisation pays to have it removed.
These are very professional operations with call centers, helplines, and live-chats. Some of them even provide a ‘Get 1 File for Free’ service to prove that the decryption works.
Human Driven Ransomware
This term describes when a group of hackers come together and plan an attack. This would often involve them having a good look around your network before they begin encrypting specific files and servers.
They typically look to exploit vulnerabilities in your network and appear to be reasonably agnostic when it comes to sectors and industries.
Victims could be a dental surgery or multinational aerospace company. The primary motivation is getting you to pay for your encryption keys.
Another way into your systems is via ‘phishing’.
This could involve an IT employee’s credentials are stolen and where the company doesn’t have sufficient protection to prevent the hackers from gaining access to the system.
Ransomware Trends
Ransomware is developing and maturing into a more industrialised activity, with a much greater trend towards automation.
A lot of Ransomware programmes will automatically send your encryption keys off to an onion domain that is spun up just for you, gaining access through something as simple as a Word or Excel document that executes a Macro in the background.
The Macro will then automatically begin to encrypt your data and spin it out onto the Dark Web.
Apart from disabling Macros, patching applications to keep things up-to-date, not opening docs you aren’t sure about and using good security software there isn’t much more you can do.
At present we are aware of between 26-30 active ransomware groups.
If you find yourself on a Ransomware site, there is nothing you can really do except pay and begin remediating.
However, police forces are active on the Dark Web looking to take down operations and have had some success. Dutch police were recently so pleased to have taken down one botnet network that they even posted about it as themselves on a hackers’ forum.
Chapter 6: How to protect organisations from illegal Dark Web activity?
Protecting your organisation from hacking and Ransomware is a difficult task, especially when a concerted hacking campaign coupled with human error comes into play.
If as an IT Professional and/or diligent CTO you have done everything within your power to secure the network and Ransomware still finds its way through a lot of it will simply come down to bad luck.
Hackers work hard to ensure that they are fully undetectable and use dynamic systems that generate malicious downloads on the fly, making it difficult to defend against these types of attacks.
The priority then becomes managing the fallout and particularly the PR as best as you can.
A data breach quickly moves from being an IT problem to a business problem. If you can show that you have behaved competently and done as much as you can there is a chance to come out of it looking better.
Our Dark Web Monitoring tool supports you in this process by providing early warnings of any Dark Web activity around your brand.
SOS gives you awareness, time, and context by letting you know if your information is out there; what information that is; and who is talking about it.
Having these instant alerts can be very reassuring, giving you time to react with the full knowledge of just how big your exposure is.
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Now we’d like to hear from you. Have you been affected by any of the issues raised in this guide? Do you have any concerns around data breaches and threat intelligence?
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