History of the Dark Web
The dark web itself was not actually created; it is simply a part of the Internet.
The concept of anonymous online communication networks is at the heart of
the Dark Web, dating back to the creation of ARPANET in the 1960s.
The Internet was released to the world around 1983 and quickly became
popular as the world began to become more and more connected. As the Internet grew
in popularity, so did the question of where all the data should be stored. The
response came in the form of a "data haven".
Data havens
function similarly to tax havens in that large amounts of data can be exported to
countries with lax laws so that it does not fall into the hands of their own
governments. The rise of data havens indicates a growing concern for online privacy,
a concern later shared by users of the dark web.
In 2000, Freenet
was released, a free software that allowed you to share files, browse
and post "freesites" anonymously.
In 2002, Tor, a private Internet
browsing network, was finally released to the world, and Tor changed
the face of the Internet forever. By creating an environment where people could
browse freely and anonymously online, the creators of Tor opened the door to the
underbelly of the Internet.
The history of the dark web is filled with
government influence. "Onion Routing" - the core principle that allows Tor to
maintain its users' anonymity - was developed and funded by the U.S. federal
government in the mid-1990s.
Onion Routing was created to protect
individuals in the intelligence community by allowing them to communicate
anonymously. It also helped protect whistleblowers, allowed citizens and journalists
living under oppressive regimes to think and express themselves freely, and kept
many others out of harm's way by protecting their anonymity. Even today, it
continues to serve the same purpose for many people around the world.
Onion
Routing was originally developed at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory by scientists
Paul Syverson, David Goldschlag and Michael Reed. Development of the project
continued through the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) until the
U.S. Navy received a patent for Onion Routing in 1998.
Although the creators
of Tor had good intentions, they could not have known that their invention would
have a widespread impact on criminal activity.
In 2009, Bitcoin was
released.
Before the invention of cryptocurrency, illegal
transactions on the dark web were difficult to complete because customers could be
located thousands of miles away and neither party wanted to risk using credit cards
or PayPal to make transactions because they would leave a paper trail.
Cryptocurrency,
a form of digital currency that facilitates anonymous transactions, is the answer to
this long-standing problem. While different forms of cryptocurrency have been
developed since the 1990s, it wasn't until 2009 that an offering called Bitcoin was
perpetuated.
The first bitcoin was "mined" by a man named Satoshi Nakamoto,
effectively starting a revolution in illegal online transactions. Bitcoin solved a
problem that previous versions of cryptocurrency could not - it had a special
accounting ledger that prevented users from copying funds.
As the problem of
anonymous transactions was solved, illegal sales on the dark web proliferated.
Although the Dark Web witnessed an increase in illegal transactions during
the 2010s, it served a benevolent purpose during the Arab Spring in late 2010.
The release of the Tor browser made it easier for users and activists who
needed it during this time to access it. tor not only protects people's online
identities, but also allows them to access critical resources, social media, and
blocked websites.
After Silk Road was seized, many similar sites followed
and still do to this day. As long as the need for anonymity exists online, the dark
web will exist.