Gwern Branwen, a deep web researcher and cryptocurrency advocate, is working to make the dark net a more accessible place to “normal” people one website at a time. After years of scraping and cataloguing the activity happening on dark net markets (DNMs) like the Silk Road, Branwen’s turned the trove of data he mined into a downloadable and searchable directory that can give anyone a peek into the sometimes unseemly world of the deep, anonymous internet.

Screenshot from a dark net marketplace that specialized in the production of child pornography.
Deep Web Dot Net

The dark net, as it's traditionally thought of, is a section of the larger internet only accessible through special browsers like TOR, the onion router, that obfuscates a user's identity. By using TOR, people are able to access websites built largely on anonymity. As a result, a lot of the dark net functions as a safe haven for illegal activity.

While more popular DNMs like the Silk Road expressly forbid the sale and purchase of child pornography, for example, other dark web sites specialized in it. One, which Branwen cites, went so far as to create sophisticated crowdfunding market designed to make sure that you had to pay for the illegal content instead of downloading it for free from other seedy corners of the dark net.

Branwen first became interested in dark net markets (DNMs) back in 2011 when Gawker’s Adrian Chen first introduced the general public to the Silk Road, a marketplace where you could buy virtually any drug you can imagine using Bitcoins. Initially, Branwen, like many other people, believed Silk Road to be a scam designed to bilk people out of their money, but he quickly learned that the anonymous marketplace was very, very real.

“Fascinated, I signed up, made my first order, and began documenting how to use SR1 (Silk Road 1) and then a few months later, began documenting the first known SR1-linked arrests,” Branwen explains in a description of his years-long project.  “Monitoring DNMs was easy because SR1 was overwhelmingly dominant and BlackMarket Reloaded was a distant second-place market, with a few irrelevancies like Deepbay or Sheep and then the flashy Atlantis.”

NEW YORK, NY - JANUARY 13: Max Dickstein stands with other upporters of Ross Ulbricht, the alleged creator and operator of the Silk Road underground market, in front of a Manhattan federal court house on the first day of jury selection for his trial on January 13, 2015 in New York City. Ulbricht, who has pleaded not guilty, is accused by the US government of making millions of dollars from the Silk Road website which sold drugs and other illegal commodities anonymously. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Getty Images

From 2013 to 2015, Branwen obsessively tracked a wide variety of metrics associated with nearly every English-language DNM and compiled it into an easily searchable database that includes hundreds of mirrored versions of different sites. The entire package, at about 1.6 terrabytes, is sizable, but you can easily search through replicated versions of sites like Silk Road in their entirety as simple (but exhaustive) HTML files.

Branwen’s gone a step further with his data dump, incorporating the same metrics from other researchers including academics and fixtures from within the DNM community. His goal, he explained in a post to r/DarkNetMarkets, a subreddit dedicated to DNMs, was to create a lasting record of the activity (good and bad) that took place during his time in the deep web before he scaled back his own personal activity in DNMs.

Evidence entered into the record of Ross Ulbricht's Federal trial in the U.S. Southern District Court of New York, depicting 9 fake IDs Ulbricht purchased for himself from the Silk Road marketplace.
U.S. Government, Federal Bureau of Investigation

“It's a good archive, I think,” Branwen wrote. “Sorting through it, I refound a lot of things I'd forgotten: the BMR mods chatting on Pastebin about one of them being arrested, unaware that Dutch police were watching them and tapping all their phones and they would be going to jail for years in weeks/months, taking down Utopia with them.”

In his description of the DNM data dump, Branwen describes a number of different things the dataset could potentially be used for, like an analysis of popular drugs being sold at a given point in time or compiling a list of all the people who’d been arrested for their DNM activity. More than anything else, though, Branwen wanted to give the data to the DNM community as a gift—as a means of tapping into a bit of deep web nostalgia.

“I give you back your memories,” he said.

Share This Story

Get our newsletter

Want Splinter’s email newsletter?
By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.