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Businesses Crime

Dream Market, the Top Dark Web Marketplace, Will Shut Down Next Month (zdnet.com) 113

Dream Market, today's top dark web marketplace, today announced plans to shut down on April 30. From a report: The announcement came on the same day Europol, FBI, and DEA officials announced tens of arrests and a massive crackdown on dark web drug trafficking. The timing of the four announcements immediately sent most of Dream Market's users and dark web threat intel analysts into a frenzy of theories that law enforcement might have already seized the site and are now running a honeypot operation. Their fears are based on a similar event from June 2017 when Dutch police took over Hansa Market and ran the site for a month while collecting evidence on the portal's users. Law enforcement later used passwords collected from Hansa Market users to gain access to accounts on other dark web marketplaces.
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Dream Market, the Top Dark Web Marketplace, Will Shut Down Next Month

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  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2019 @02:17PM (#58337168)
    There's pretty broad support for it. I know folks who don't want to legalize the hard stuff (think cocaine, meth and heroine) but there's places that have done it and then treated addiction as a medical condition and it's worked well.

    It does mean you can't just abandon addicts though, e.g. you can't just lock them up in a hole in the ground, you need to provide treatment, but even then the treatment is often cheaper than paying somebody to guard the hole, so to speak.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I'm guessing there are at least a couple reasons to not legalize drugs: 1) Legalization would probably put a dent in big pharma profits 2) Legalization would give cops one less reason to pull over and arrest people.
    • I keep wondering why we don't legalize drugs

      That should be obvious to anyone with a pulse: someone is benefitting from their criminalization.

    • Surprise surprise!! There are actually people in the world that don't want to have to deal with zombie-like idiots that are strung out on drugs, walking around everywhere.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Making drugs legal won't instantly transform hordes of otherwise-responsible people into drug users. Despite drugs being illegal, they are easily available basically everywhere; so the people who want to use them already are.

        Your laws aren't making "those people" vanish. Your laws are just ensuring that tremendous amounts of wealth and power are being funneled into the hands of mafia bosses, instead of lawful tax-paying citizens.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. The base-problem is that we have these fuckups in society that want to control what other people do, no matter what. And they think the only thing fun in live should be prayer.

      In actual reality, anybody that wants drugs can get them. None of the deterrents work. The deterrents waste an extreme amount of money though and cause massive secondary damage. So legalizing drugs would have a number of advantages.

      First, the cost goes down massively and the quality goes massively up and becomes reliable. That

    • Natural law does not countenance the idea of imprisoning people for the mere possession, use, or sale of anything, so long as no one is harmed thereby without his or her informed consent. But neither does it condone the practice of knowingly, negligently, or avoidably causing harm to another without said consent. So under law, these substances would probably remain available, but there would be no incentive to maximize the concentration or potency of any of them (this is an artifact of their "illegal" sta
  • the real solution (Score:3, Interesting)

    by slashmydots ( 2189826 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2019 @02:36PM (#58337244)
    I was shocked to hear that people were sending the drugs Fedex, USPS, and UPS like it was ebay or something. When I asked online why they can't just put drug sniffing dogs in all USPS mail hubs, everyone said it's unreasonable search and seizure. That sounds ridiculous to me. If a cop looks in the window of your car and see a pile of drugs, they don't need your permissions or a warrant to "search" it at that point. The same goes for sniffing drug residue off the OUTSIDE of a box and then opening it. That would instantly solve the entire problem because without a shipping carrier, there is no dark web drug sales. Why are they not doing this?!?!
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If a cop looks in the window of your car and see a pile of drugs, they don't need your permissions or a warrant to "search" it at that point.

      What if they just walk the dogs around every window of every house in your neighborhood?

    • Re:the real solution (Score:5, Interesting)

      by sjames ( 1099 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2019 @03:04PM (#58337360) Homepage Journal

      If they did that, they would be forced to admit that there's enough residue on common items that the dog would alert to everything.

      For example, money. Pretty much all of it will test positive for at least cocaine.

      The dirty secret: Most of the time the dog alerts due to subtle cues from it's handler, not from something it smells.

      • The dirty secret: Most of the time the dog alerts due to subtle cues from it's handler, not from something it smells.

        That's certainly an interesting assertion. Is it anecdotal or have people/studies shown this?
        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          The AC's link is good. Here's another [reason.com]

          Even ignoring that, the problem is more fundamental. Let's imagine for a moment the world's one and only infallible drug sniffing dog. He alerts to the SMELL of drugs. That is not the same as alerting to drugs actually in the package. If someone else's package full of drugs got damaged, there may be drugs ON the innocent package. If it rode in the back of a hot truck next to an imperfectly sealed box of pot, it will smell like pot. In either case since it is rare for on

          • by gweihir ( 88907 )

            Also, the whole thing does not work on the tech side in the first place. If it did, the packaging of the wares would just be upgraded to something the dogs cannot snuff though. Also, it is absolutely no problem to send, say, 10% fake shipments to people that never ordered anything, probably with just the carton soaked in the stuff to set off the dogs, but not endanger anybody at the target. That would kill the dog idea pretty fast. They would collapse from overwork and no useful result would ensue.

    • Re:the real solution (Score:4, Informative)

      by anglico ( 1232406 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2019 @03:12PM (#58337418)

      When I was a UPS Driver in Santa Cruz we would get back to the building with our pick ups and there were San Jose PD drug sniffing dogs going over the conveyor belts. Any hits and they would pull the packages aside and then let the dogs go over them more thoroughly outside.
        The dogs were from the San Jose PD, and I don't know how many centers they would check, or maybe it was just Santa Cruz, but it happened every fall during harvest time. I told my grower friends if they are going to use UPS, make sure to use Next Day Air, those are taken from the truck to the airport shuttle pretty quickly to make flights out, so the dogs never got to sniff those.
        This was back in 2000 though, so things may have changed until it became legal.

      • I worked at a UPS hub in San Diego and they had no drug sniffing dogs. Sure, if a driver noticed a massive marijuana smell from a package, the package would be given to the police, but it is not hard to keep your package from being so smelly that the driver picking it up has no idea what is inside.

        There may be drug sniffing dogs in some distribution centers but certainly not in all; furthermore, it is likely illegal (not tested in a court of law, yet) to have a dog at a distribution facility.

    • Envelopes and parcels jostle together an awful lot. That means that enough residue for a dog to smell will easily pass from the envelope or parcel with drugs to one without. That means a lot of false positives. That means unreasonable search and seizure.

    • Re:the real solution (Score:4, Interesting)

      by AvitarX ( 172628 ) <me@brandywinehund r e d .org> on Tuesday March 26, 2019 @03:37PM (#58337554) Journal

      let's see.

      1 dog, 6 packages/minute (unlikely they could actually do one in 10 seconds)).
      8 hours sniffing/day (no idea how many they actually can work, but between food, and walks, and what not, seems reasonable)

      that's 2800/dog/day

      UPS sends 15.8 million packages/day on average.

      So that's 5600 drug dogs (though they'd need 50% more in the winter).

      So, 4000 for the dog, 1000 for the training stuff, 2500 for food and vet over it's life, for 5 productive years

      1500/year * 5000 is 7.5 million/year.

      Of course, 5200 handlers is likely another 150 million or so.

      And to cover Christmas we're at 50% more.

      That's a lot of money, ignoring the fact that a 10 second per package bottle neck would make shipping that many packages practically impossible.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday March 26, 2019 @03:39PM (#58337568)

      If they did this, an obvious counter-measure would be for the drug gangs to pay an insider to smear a bit of cocaine paste on random packages.

      Misting all the packages with capsaicin would also work.

      • There is a bigger horror here:
        What if Big Brother decides that its okay, and start tracking down people sending cocaine paste packages? I can see forced verification of return address to ship becoming common if somebody bothered.

        Generally the most interesting thing about enforcement is that it works so long its actually consistent and upheld. And what isn't enforced won't be enforced and will go nowhere.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      You overlook two things: First, getting drugs is actually easy. And second, it is mostly tolerated, simply because doing something effective would cost a lot of people their jobs. The same people that are employed in the "war" on drugs, incidentally. So they just need to make enough arrests (mostly small, the occasional larger one, but never threatening the whole business) to keep the fear going and to justify their pay-checks. But they must never actually put a real dent in the thing.

  • What's with this obsession with drugs? It seems everywhere there's this about drugs, that about drugs, war on drugs, legalize drugs, outlaw drugs, prescription drug costs, drug lords, drug commercials, miracle drugs, drug addicts, etc. OK, I drink coffee everyday so I guess I'm a druggie like everyone else. It seems to me just think a fraction of effort and money put into drugs were to be put into something else (i.e. fix all the rusty bridges or fix all the broken HVAC in schools) but maybe we simply don't
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Doing something positive with the money? Naa, we cannot have that. Doing negative things like fighting some trumped up evil is far easier, because you do not actually have to be effective. Some small victories here and there, the occasional larger one, but never anything decisive and never even attempt to win overall. That way you can be seen doing "good" all the time without needing any actual success or endangering your job.

  • You are government property. That's why they get to decide what substances you can, can't, and must consume. People don't like corporations? Corporations don't send armed men to your house in the middle of the night to abduct you because you have a plant they don't like.

    Government is the worst, freedom is so much better.

  • I came here to find the one thing I figured my fellow Slashdot geeks would be on top of: the technical details of how these people were de-anonymized. Another JavaScript exploit? Tor flaw? What? Instead I see pages of tired debate about drug legalization that I could get on any Facebook post. I want the tech details. Any pointers?
    • From the various links in TFA, looks like somebody ODâ(TM)d, had a manila envelope, which surveillance (cams & mail routing info) tracked to sender. Repeat a few times, announce âoeWe are Coming for Youâ and âoeDarknet is not Safeâ coordinated press releases. Meh. Physical delivery is definitely the weak link in the DNM chain. I blame government-monopoly mail systems.

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