DocumentCode
3408641
Title
ICITST-2013: Keynote speaker 2: Security challenge of TOR and the deep web
Author
Stupples, David
fYear
2013
fDate
9-12 Dec. 2013
Firstpage
14
Lastpage
14
Abstract
The deep-dark web is both surprising and sinister and accounts for in excess of 90% of the overall internet. Google and other search engines deal only with the indexed surface web. The deep-dark web hosts illegal markets, such as the Silk Road, malware emporiums, illegal pornography, and covert meeting places and messaging services. The pervasiveness of the Internet provides easy access to dark-web sites from anywhere in the world. The growth of the dark web has been paralleled by an increasing number of anonymity web-overlay services, such as Tor, which allow criminals, terrorists, hackers, paedophiles and the like to shop and communicate with impunity. Law enforcement and security agencies have had only very limited success in combating and containing this dark menace. The aim of this talk is to present a systems analysis view of the dark web in order to identify possible approaches to controlling illicit activity.
Keywords
Web services; Web sites; computer network security; indexing; information retrieval; law; search engines; Google; Internet; Law enforcement; Tor; anonymity Web-overlay service; deep dark Website access; illegal markets; illicit activity control; indexed surface Web; search engines; security agency; security challenge;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Internet Technology and Secured Transactions (ICITST), 2013 8th International Conference for
Conference_Location
London
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICITST.2013.6750149
Filename
6750149
Link To Document