Reports suggest that the Silk Road, the anonymous
marketplace that traded in drugs and other illegal goods, is back online, in a
new version.
The first version of Silk Road was shut down by the FBI in
October and its alleged administrator arrested.
But those behind it always vowed to revive the site.
The new administrator of the revived site has adopted the
same handle as the previous operator - Dread Pirate Roberts.
The FBI believe that arrested 29-year-old Ross Ulbricht was
the mastermind behind the original site. Mr Ulbricht has denied all charges
Big business
The twitter feed for Dread Pirate Roberts reads:
"#SilkRoad has lift-off".
According to AllThingsVice, the new homepage reads
"This Hidden Site Has Risen Again", parodying the US Department of
Justice notice, which read "the hidden site has been seized".
Twitter was buzzing with talk of whether the new site was a
genuine replacement or a scam. Others asked how long it would take before it
was closed down by the FBI.
According to Ken Westin, a researcher with security firm
TripWire, the site looks genuine.
"It appears to be run by the same folks that were
running it before," he said.
"They are not going to be able to kill it. It is going
to be a game of cat and mouse with the FBI," he added.
Etay Maor, a fraud prevention manager with security firm
Trusteer, and an expert on the dark net, said it was anyone's guess how long it
would last.
"It could be 24 hours or it could be a year."
But with the Silk Road banking over $1.3bn (£810m) in two
years from taking a percentage of sales, he is not surprised that it may be
back online.
"It is big business and those behind it want to get it
back up," he said.
Worst things
In the aftermath of the Silk Road shutdown, alternative dark
net marketplaces saw huge increases in traffic.
One, dubbed Project Black Flag, closed down shortly after
launch, with the founder Metta Dread Pirate taking the Bitcoin currency
accumulated on it with him.
He wrote on the site's forum: "I am sorry for my
actions, but with the funds I gathered from the site, I will be able to keep
myself from being homeless for the next several months".
But there were plenty more, said Mr Maor.
"The Silk Road was the biggest and everyone knew it,
but it is scary the amount of sites on the dark net.
"From selling weapons to money collection for jihadist
groups. You name it - the worse things you can think of, it's all there,"
he said.
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