12 Disturbing Things You'll Find On The Dark Web
12 Disturbing Things You'll Find On The Dark Web
"If you're not in the know, you might be asking, "What is it ?" Also known as the "dark net" (this latter term is, in fact, more accurate) and primarily accessed through the Tor network, the deep web is basically the . It's also an anonymous "playground" for content that's illegal or unsuitable for the "clearnet" (the everyday Internet). It is largely untraceable (though not completely) and is perhaps most widely used for the sale of illegal substances.
Beyond drugs, some use the deep web to buy and sell firearms and other weapons. But perhaps most alarming of all, some use it to exchange or discuss child pornography, cryptically referred to as "cheese pizza." (The "C" and "P" heading each word explains this code word.)
While these illegal and downright sickening aspects of the deep web are unsettling in and of themselves, the deep web's reputation as a playground for hedonism, depravity, and nefarious or sinister acts is a bit unfounded. Aside from questionable pornographic content and illegal sales, much of the content accessed via Tor is fairly innocuous. Several Reddit threads corroborate this, as users encountered mostly mundane forums and load times so slow they lost patience before every really seeing anything. (Read a few of those threads , and .)
And yet, while they are certainly the exceptions and not the rule, there are a handful of out there that manage to baffle, disturb, and even sicken. True, some of the more disturbing content on the dark net is the stuff of rumor and lore, but this doesn't make it any less creepy -- particularly when considering that, while they have not been proven to exist, they have not been disproven either."
- via Ranker
1.) Daisy's Destruction
It's difficult to separate fact from urban legend here, since having detailed knowledge of sadistic Australian child pornographer Peter Scully's videos would basically be an admission of committing a crime.
What is clear is that "Daisy's Destruction" (sometimes called "The Destruction of Daisy") are extreme and brutal videos, available only in the darkest corners of the deep web, featuring children as young as two years old being tortured, assaulted, and in some cases, murdered by Scully and various accomplices.
If you are so inclined, you can find descriptions of these videos around the web. But Scully is now in prison and his utterly sickening videos are now the property of the FBI, so it's safe to assume most of the finer details still available are mere rumor. Still, the very fact these videos exist in the first place is enough to churn your stomach.
2.) 8Chan's Baphomet Subboard
If you're familiar with GamerGate , you've likely heard about 8chan, the forum and message board site where "anything goes," more or less. And if you know about GamerGate, you're probably all too familiar with the term "doxing," a process of temporarily making certain individuals' personal information (home address, phone number, email, etc.) available in order to harass them. (As part of GamerGate, sexist gamers targeted women in the video game industry for this kind of harassment.)
The Baphomet subboard is the place where most doxing takes place, as it is seated within the dark net, and thus harder to trace. Users of the subboard go one step further by posting the personal information for a brief period of time, then deleting it. This allows those in the know to obtain the information anonymously and use it instigate vicious attacks.
3.) Cruel Onion Wiki
There's an old saying: "If you can think of it, it's probably a fetish." This adage proves true for many deplorable and inhuman acts, like child pornography, of course, but also for the things happening on the Cruel Onion Wiki. It's a dark web site that features scantily-clad or semi-nude women crushing and killing small animals - including kittens - under their feet.
Animal cruelty laws prevent such sites from operating above the radar, and the Cruel Onion Wiki has been shut down on a few occasions. However, much like the rest of the dark net, the site always manages to resurface under a different name or URL.
4.) Pink Meth
Fortunately, Pink Meth is a website that was hosted on the dark net, until it seized was by the FBI in 2014. Despite the name, the site had nothing to do with drugs. Rather, Pink Meth was a market mainly for men, whereby they could sell nude photos of their exes for a hefty sum. Pink Meth then posted these photos, alongside the women's names, home addresses, phone numbers, and any other information the operators could dig up. Then, a ransom on the content was delivered to the victim - pay up to have the photo removed, or let the whole of the dark web have access to your personal information, including your nude photos.
5.) Violent Desires
The name of this forum, which is purported to still exist as of 2016, pretty much describes what you might find there: people sharing their most gruesome and brutal desires. Perhaps the most infamous example is a post written by an anonymous doctor who offered to "manufacture" living child sex dolls through a combination of human torture, experimentation, and body modification.
While it is likely that Violent Desires is mostly just fantasy, the Armin Miewes cannibalism case - where a derange man killed and ate a voluntary victim he found online - arose from a "clearnet" (regular, everyday) Internet forum called The Cannibal Cafe, where users shared their sexual "appetites" with one another. It just goes to show that in an anonymous place, anything can happen.
6.) Red Rooms
If you've seen the David Cronenberg film Videodrome, you understand the basic concept of a red room. Essentially, it's a live feed of people being tortured and killed in highly perverse ways. Some even speculate that, for a price, you can act as the "director" of the red room, and tell the torturer exactly what to do to the victim.
The thing is -- if you can locate a red room easily, it probably isn't real. The appeal of the deep web is its anonymity, so if something as perverse as a red room actually exists, it is doubtful the orchestrators would put out a welcome mat. Moreover, if you've genuinely witnessed a red room on the deep web, you wouldn't necessarily admit it. Otherwise you'd be headed to jail.
All that said, the existence of a genuine red room is not that implausible.
7.) Cicada 3301
No one is really sure of the purpose behind Cicada 3301. It's a group that hosts an annual, Internet-based puzzle that involves mystery telephone numbers, voice messages, and GPS coordinates, and dips into the dark web via the Tor network. There isn't enough room here to go into the intricacies of the puzzle, but you can read a pretty thorough breakdown of the steps here, from one man who came the closest to actually solving it.
Is Cicada 3301 a secret government recruiting tool? An anarchist or anti-establishment group looking for the savviest of members? Simply a hoax? The world may never know.
8.) Human Trafficking
Could you purchase a human being on the deep web? Some advertise just this service, as Vice Motherboard writer Joseph Cox reported in July 2015. He describes interactions over email with a group called Black Death, who had for sale a woman named "Nicole," with a starting bid of $150,000. After numerous covert attempts to see live web cam footage of Nicole and arrange a deal, Black Death and their site disappeared.
As it turns out, Black Death was likely a scam operation, as the images of Nicole were apparently screen shots from a porno movie. This more or less confirmed suspicions of an unnamed tactical advisor from the National Crime Agency's UK Human Trafficking Centre (UKHTC), who noted that genuine human traficking sites are not as glossy as the images Cox discovered.
This confirms that backdoor sales of living human beings does indeed happen, but anything an average person-or even a journalist, for that matter-stumble upon in their browsing of the dark web is likely fake, a means of taking your money and running - which, if you were seriously hoping to buy a person online, serves you right.
9.) Fake Passports
On the surface, fake passport and documentation "factories" seem fairly innocuous compared to things like animal cruelty and child pornography, but when one considers that these forged papers could be purchased by ISIS and other terrorist organizations in order to enter countries with tightened border security-namely, the U.S. and the U.K.-the notion becomes rather alarming.
But is this actually happening? In February 2017, a Daily Beast reported on a document factory ran by the Camorra, a Neopolitan mafia, who advertised their services on a website that was only accessible via the deep web. These passports are reportedly so sophisticated they easily pass as the real thing. There were also connections between this "company" and a string of illegal arms deals carried out by known terrorist networks.
Despite all this, it isn't actually clear whether or not these fake passports were used to carry terrorists over borders they might not otherwise cross, so whether this is indeed an illegal service accessible via the deep web remains to be seen.
10.) Hitmen
There are numerous sites and organizations accessible via the deep web that claim to offer contract-killer services. Of course, as many Reddit users theorize (likely correctly), these services are probably sting operations for the FBI.
Moreover, even if these organizations are "legit" (in the sense they are not fronts for law enforcement agencies), there is still no guarantee they are, indeed, contract killer services. Because the deep web's major currency is bitcoin, which is essentially non-refundable, your attempts to off someone may result in plain and simple robbery.
Still, the only way to find out for sure is to actually engage these services, which would either result in you being arrested, or having someone you know killed for a large sum of money...
11.) Weapons
While sales of guns and other weapons do take place in certain dark web markets, it isn't as common as most people think. That's mostly because weapons are tricky to send via snail mail (as opposed to drugs, which can be easily hidden when shipped in small quantities), according to Fast Company . Moreover, should you attempt to purchase a firearm via a dark web market, you might find yourself in trouble with the law, as it is highly possible that many sellers are undercover FBI or DEA agents.
Still, the mere idea of illegal gun sales - particularly to those who should absolutely not own guns - is terrifying.
12.) Drugs
Drugs are perhaps the most dominant commodity on the dark web, especially MDMA, and LSD and its derivatives. They are easy to conceal and ship to online shoppers. But buyers should beware, not merely because the anonymity of the deep web increases the risk of getting scammed, but also because it is virtually impossible to "know your dealer."
This means the quality of products will certainly vary, especially when it comes to drugs that are unpredictable by nature. Take for instance the hallucinogen 25I-NBOMe, otherwise known as N-Bomb, which can be mass produced by anyone with a passing knowledge of chemistry (and thus made poorly if the manufacturer doesn't really know what they're doing). This makes the drug particularly dangerous, even deadly. Not to mention it can mirror the effects of bath salts and potentially lead to rapid kidney failure.
A LINK IN THE COMMENTS WILL BE LEFT FOR THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE. NONE OF THIS IS MY OWN WORDING - ALL CREDIT TO RANKER.
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