Katana VentraIP

Darknet

A dark net or darknet is an overlay network within the Internet that can only be accessed with specific software, configurations, or authorization,[1] and often uses a unique customized communication protocol. Two typical darknet types are social networks[2] (usually used for file hosting with a peer-to-peer connection),[3] and anonymity proxy networks such as Tor via an anonymized series of connections.[4]

This article is about network technology. For other uses, see Darknet (disambiguation). For websites that exist on top of this technology, see dark web.

The term "darknet" was popularized by major news outlets and was associated with Tor Onion services when the infamous drug bazaar Silk Road used it,[5] despite the terminology being unofficial. Technology such as Tor, I2P, and Freenet are intended to defend digital rights by providing security, anonymity, or censorship resistance and are used for both illegal and legitimate reasons. Anonymous communication between whistle-blowers, activists, journalists and news organisations is also facilitated by darknets through use of applications such as SecureDrop.[6]

Terminology

The term originally described computers on ARPANET that were hidden, programmed to receive messages but not respond to or acknowledge anything, thus remaining invisible and in the dark.[7]


Since ARPANET, the usage of dark net has expanded to include friend-to-friend networks (usually used for file sharing with a peer-to-peer connection) and privacy networks such as Tor.[8][9] The reciprocal term for a darknet is a clearnet or the surface web when referring to content indexable by search engines.[10]


The term "darknet" is often used interchangeably with "dark web" because of the quantity of hidden services on Tor's darknet. Additionally, the term is often inaccurately used interchangeably with the deep web because of Tor's history as a platform that could not be search-indexed. Mixing uses of both these terms has been described as inaccurate, with some commentators recommending the terms be used in distinct fashions.[11][12][13]

To better protect the rights of citizens from targeted and mass surveillance

privacy

(cracking, file corruption, etc.)

Computer crime

Protecting from political reprisal

dissidents

(warez, personal files, pornography, confidential files, illegal or counterfeit software, etc.)

File sharing

Sale of restricted goods on

darknet markets

and news leaks

Whistleblowing

Purchase or sale of illicit or illegal goods or services

[17]

network censorship and content-filtering systems, or bypassing restrictive firewall policies[18]

Circumventing

Darknets in general may be used for various reasons, such as:

is a decentralized friend-to-friend network built using VPN and software BGP routers.

anoNet

(not for anonymity but research purposes).

Decentralized network 42

is a popular DHT file hosting darknet platform. It supports friend-to-friend and opennet modes.

Freenet

can be utilized as a darknet[20] if the "F2F (network) topology" option is enabled.[21]

GNUnet

(Invisible Internet Project) is an overlay proxy network that features hidden services called "Eepsites".

I2P

has a browser extension that may backup popular webpages.

IPFS

is a friend-to-friend messenger communication and file transfer platform. It may be used as a darknet if DHT and Discovery features are disabled.

RetroShare

is a government, client-server darknet system that simultaneously provides secure anonymity (as long as at least one server remains uncompromised), efficient computation, and minimal bandwidth burden.[22][23]

Riffle

is a peer-to peer communication protocol, mesh network, and self-hosted social media ecosystem

Secure Scuttlebutt

is software used to publish distributed forums over the anonymous networks of I2P, Tor and Freenet.

Syndie

(The onion router) is an anonymity network that also features a darknet – via its onion services.

Tor

is an anonymous BitTorrent client with built in search engine, and non-web, worldwide publishing through channels.

Tribler

is a federated system of personal servers in a peer-to-peer overlay network.

Urbit

is a DHT Web 2.0 hosting with Tor users.

Zeronet