Thursday, 12 June 2014

7 Urgent Things to Tell Your Folks About Ransomware and the Dark Web

"The dark Web." The term evokes imagery from a suspense thriller, complete with spies, a gritty hero and evil technology overlords intent on dominating the earth. Contrary to the sensationalist hype about the dark Web and its various offspring like ransomware, the underlying tech itself is neither good nor evil. Nevertheless, a lot of evil people do use dark-Web resources to conduct illegal sales and steal from innocent but unprepared Internet users.

Much more is hidden on the Web, than is visible.

Some Of The Web Is Dark
The "dark Web" is so-named because the content contained therein isn't discoverable by search engines. That's all. A lot of good stuff hides on the "dark Web" or the "deep Web" -- including academic research and protected corporate files. And it's huge: In 2001 (an eternity ago in Internet time!), Michael Bergman, a professor and entrepreneur, published a paper suggesting the dark Web is at least 400 times larger than the Web you can reach with Google

Much more is hidden on the Web, than is visible.


Evil Lurks In The Shadows
Although the dark Web isn't inherently bad, a lot of bad people choose to use it to obscure criminal behavior. Because it's harder to track and identify users on the dark Web, its corners have become a haven for identity thieves, child pornographers, drug dealers, and arms merchants. Now-shuttered organizations like the Silk Road -- a Craigslist for evildoers -- helped people buy and sell illegal items with relative ease, for example.

The relative anonymity of the dark Web fuels illegal activity.



A Web Of Onions
The benign part of the dark Web works simply by excluding content from search-engines. What's not indexed, simply grows dark. But the seedier and more dangerous part of the dark Web uses technology like The Onion Router (TOR) to deliberately obscure a user's location and identity. TOR employs encryption technology and sends data through many different nodes to conceal who is doing what, and why.
Data using TOR passes through many different, encrypted machines before arriving at its destination.

Will That Be Cash Or Bitcoin?
Illegal marketplaces generally don't accept personal checks, and you can't send a bundle of Franklins by email, so crypto currencies -- currencies based on computer algorithms instead of government mints -- are right at home on the dark Web. Bitcoin remains one of the most popular crypto currencies. The U.S. government thinks that $1.2 billion of the $2 billion in bitcoin circulating in late 2013 passed through Silk Road's illegal-trading bazaar.
When the feds shut down Silk Road, global bitcoin exchange rates plummeted.



Why The Dark Web Can Touch You
Criminals using TOR and paying in bitcoin affect people who may never visit the dark Web. Bitcoin can be converted to U.S. currency, so identity thieves steal identities to open fake accounts (or hack into existing accounts). That's where spyware and phishing attacks come in, and that's why you should run strong antivirus and refrain from clicking links or running programs that you don't recognize.
More than 93,000 unique phishing attacks occurred in the first half of 2012.


Ransomware
Some hackers have gotten more brazen. Instead of just spying on you, they've developed malware like CryptoLocker that silently encrypt your whole computer. You'll get a warning that you have a small window of time to transfer money (sometimes by credit card, and sometimes bitcoins) to a specific online address, or you'll lose all your data permanently. You're effectively locked out of your own computer, and there's no way to fix it. Without a reliable backup, you'll lose your data.
Pay up, or lose access to your files.


Staying Safe
Staying safe on the Internet is like avoiding infection on a crowded airliner: Your odds are good if you prepare, but otherwise you'll be taking medicine afterwards. Keep your antivirus app up-to-date, don't click odd links, don't use smartphone apps from untrusted vendors, use secure browsing (look for HTTPS in the browser bar), limit the personal data you put online, use strong passwords, and limit credit-card use online. To protect against ransomware, keep backups in places not routinely attached to your computer's file system.
A few minutes at the keyboard strengthing your online security could save hours or days of pain later.




2 comments:

  1. a lot of scammers out there are increasing with different skills even antivirus fails to protect us sometimes

    ReplyDelete
  2. find your answers here https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=27301.0

    ReplyDelete