While the Internet has always led
the way forward with different innovations leading to increased accessibility
of a lot of information, it has also created ways for people to do malicious
things. Silk Road is an example of how the Internet has enabled people to
acquire illegal things. Silk Road was created in February of 2011 and was an
online black market, a website where people could buy and sell anything, legal
or illegal. This included drugs of any kind and information, among many other
things. Seller accounts were, at first, auctioned off to the highest bidder due
to limited accounts. Then, due to the success of Silk Road, they removed the
cap on how many seller accounts could be created and seller accounts were just
charged a fixed price to be created. When you think about it, how Silk Road did
not get shut down within days of its creation is pretty incredible.
Eventually, after about two years
of investigation by the FBI, the website was shut down and Ross William
Ulbricht, also known as “Dread Prate Roberts,” was charged with being the
site’s founder. Several months after Silk Road had been shut down, a new Silk
Road 2.0 had been created with a new “Dread Prate Roberts” and assurances were
made by the administrators of the new site that it had vastly improved
security, however this website was too shut down about a year after it was
created. There are many variations of this type of website that are created and
shut down.
Another website very close to Silk
Road is The Armory. It ran in a fashion similar to Silk Road in the way that it
was paid for through bit coins and it allowed you to purchase things that
shouldn’t be accessible to all people. The Armory allowed you to purchase
pistols, rifles, shotguns, and more without having to do anything besides pay
for it. No background checks were run or anything of that nature. That could
have possibly allowed for a group of people to arm themselves through this
website and, if they so chose, either shoot up a school or a hospital or do
something of that nature. Thankfully, The Armory was shut down when Silk Road
was shut down, but there are still sites similar to it, the same way there are
sites similar to Silk Road.
It is inevitable that sites like
Silk Road and The Armory continue to pop up due to the sheer demand for drugs, weapons,
and the other things sold, and the lengths that some people will go to acquire
these items. Silk Road was only one of these drug websites. There are other
sites just like it up and running at this very moment that the FBI are seeking
out and hunting down. These sites are only possible through the anonymity that
the Internet allows a person to have through different codes and routing
numbers. Massive drug rings and
markets on such a scale (totaling over 1.2 billion dollars in about two years)
are simply not possible without the Internet providing the wide spread
accessibility to said drug markets.
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