Come to the dark web… it’s a little safer now

Digital freedom
2 mins
the dark web gets a little lighter

The dark web has long been seen as the skeevy underbelly of the Internet where users can buy illegal drugs, steal people’s credit card information, and hire someone to “off” their neighbor. In reality, the dark web isn’t nearly as sinister. Instead, it’s a vast network of mostly legitimate websites that can only be accessed with a Tor browser.

Tor, which is an acronym for “The Onion Router,” lets you access the dark web anonymously by concealing your location and encrypting your private information. Many big-name sites, including Facebook, are now hosted on Tor to give their users more secure and private access.

Until last week, Tor sites had few security measures. But thanks to a new decision by Internet regulators, domains used within the Tor network will now be recognized as “Special Use Domains,” giving these sites more security and anonymity.

[Check out our list of the best onion sites on the dark web.]

The Not-Quite-So-Dark Web

Before explaining what the dark web is, it’s important first to explain how it works. The dark web is a term used to refer to anything on the Internet hidden from traditional Web browsers like Safari, Chrome, and Firefox

These hidden sites usually contain sensitive information and turn URLs into strings of random numbers and letters that end in .onion to encrypt the sites.

While a dark side of the network does exist, the dark web is mostly made up of whistleblowing and privacy sites.

darth vader only surfs the dark web

One Small Step for Man, One Giant Leap for Internet Security

The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) and the Engineering Task Force (IETF) now consider .onion websites as “special use domains,”  allowing Tor site owners to add SSL and TLS certificates to their websites to enhance their security.

Richard Barnes, security lead at Mozilla, spoke about the new changes in an interview with Motherboard:

This enables the Tor .onion ecosystem to benefit from the same level of security you can get in the rest of the web. It adds a layer of security on top.

Why Now?

If the dark web has been around since 2002, why is it only now receiving security certificates? In a recent TEDTalk, social media analyst Jaime Bartlett discussed the growing popularity of the dark web. According to Bartlett, Tor now has 2.5 million unique users a day, thanks in large part to the Snowden revelations. Many of the users are just ordinary people who want to maintain their privacy on the Internet.

The dark net is no longer a den for dealers and a hideout for whistleblowers. It’s already going mainstream. – Jaime Bartlett

What This Means for the Future

The new special domain status will hopefully open the discussion for future security certificates and better encryption mechanisms on private networks. But more than that, it gives legitimate recognition to Tor sites, which until now have vastly been ignored or written off as sordid.

It’s a small step, but the right one.

 

Featured image: dk_photo / Dollar Photo Club

Lexie is the blog's resident tech expert and gets excited about empowerment through technology, space travel, and pancakes with blueberries.