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vacuum
24th April 2014, 11:59 PM
Basically, this is an anonymous, peer-to-peer, decentralized, marketplace. Only 3 people need to be involved in any transaction: a buyer, a seller, and an arbitrator. (Or only a buyer and seller if they trust each other).

It's got an automated reputation system, and identities are represented cryptographically and stored on the blockchain.

This is just an open source proof-of-concept at this point. Anyone can finish it and put it into operation if they want to, the guys that wrote this are doing it as a side project and focusing on their main bitcoin projects right now, so it could be a while before they themselves finish it.

Yes, there can be scams (and there most definitely will be), but it's highly profitable to build a good reputation. People will give them bad ratings and complain on forums if they scam, and conversely, they will praise those who always deliver through forums and other means, so it won't take long before a somewhat stable ecosystem develops. Arbitrators as well will be making a lot of money if they have a good reputation and charge a small fee for their service.


Inside the ‘DarkMarket’ Prototype, a Silk Road the FBI Can Never Seize



By Andy Greenberg (http://www.wired.com/author/andygreenberg/)
04.24.14 |
6:30 am |

http://www.wired.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Screen-Shot-2014-04-22-at-4.45.06-PM-660x335.png (http://www.wired.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Screen-Shot-2014-04-22-at-4.45.06-PM.png)
The homepage of DarkMarket, a prototype for a decentralized online black market.

The Silk Road, for all its clever uses of security protections like Tor and Bitcoin to protect the site’s lucrative drug trade, still offered its enemies a single point of failure. When the FBI seized the server that hosted the market in October and arrested its alleged owner Ross Ulbricht (http://www.wired.com/2013/11/silk-road/), the billion-dollar drug bazaar came crashing down.

If one group of Bitcoin black market enthusiasts has their way, the next online free-trade zone could be a much more elusive target.

At a Toronto Bitcoin hackathon earlier this month, the group took home the $20,000 first prize with a proof-of-concept for a new online marketplace known as DarkMarket, a fully peer-to-peer system with no central authority for the feds to attack. If DarkMarket’s distributed architecture works, law enforcement would be forced to go after every contraband buyer and seller one by one, a notion that could signal a new round in the cat-and-mouse game of illicit online sales.
“What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger,” said Amir Taaki, one of DarkMarket’s creators and the founder of the anarchist group Unsystem, in a short speech at the Toronto Bitcoin Expo unveiling the project. He compared DarkMarket’s improvements on the now-defunct Silk Road to the advent of Bittorrent, a decentralized technology that revamped Napster’s more vulnerable model of filesharing and flummoxed copyright enforcers. “Like a hydra, those of us in the community that push for individual empowerment are in an arms race to equip the people with the tools needed for the next generation of digital black markets.”

DarkMarket, Taaki and its other developers admit, is still just an experimental demonstration. They have yet to integrate anonymity protections like Tor into the software; currently every user’s IP address is listed for every other user to see. And black market enthusiasts shouldn’t expect DarkMarket’s creators to finish the open source project themselves any time soon–Taaki says he’s focused on polishing his anonymous Bitcoin software project Dark Wallet (http://www.forbes.com/sites/andygreenberg/2013/10/31/darkwallet-aims-to-be-the-anarchists-bitcoin-app-of-choice/), and his co-creators Damian Cutillo and William Swanson say they’re tied up with their own Bitcoin startup known as Airbitz.

“This is just a simple prototype, but we wanted to show people that it’s possible,” Taaki says. “But this is going to happen. If not us, someone else will do it.”
Taaki argues that DarkMarket’s code, posted to GitHub (https://github.com/darkwallet/darkmarket), already has all the basic ingredients that made Silk Road a giant underground success: the ability for buyers and sellers to communicate privately and make payments to each other, pages where sellers can show their wares, a reputation system for sellers with ratings and reviews, and an escrow system that protects payment until goods are received by the buyer. “And it’s all totally decentralized,” says Taaki.
Achieving those functions, while also preventing scams and fraud, is no simple task. Two of DarkMarket’s creators, Swanson and Cutillo, gave WIRED a demo of the software along with a step-by-step explanation of how a typical deal would go down. What they revealed is a Rube Goldberg machine of checks and balances designed to prevent users from cheating each other, without ever requiring oversight from an administrator or other authority figure.
Here’s how it works:



A user downloads the DarkMarket software, which runs as a daemon in the background of the user’s operating system, allowing them to connect to the DarkMarket network through any browser. The DarkMarket daemon incorporates a library of commands for peer-to-peer networking known as ZeroMQ, which allows the user’s PC to become a node in a distributed network where every user can communicate directly with every other user.
Any DarkMarket user can become a seller on the market simply by editing an HTML file that DarkMarket designates as his or her seller page, adding pictures and descriptions of items for sale just as he or she would on the Silk Road or eBay. (For users with nothing to sell, the page remains blank.) Buyers can browse the market by clicking on other users’ DarkMarket nodes or search for a seller’s nickname to view their seller pages. At the moment, DarkMarket displays only a bare IP address for every user, but the system’s creators say it will eventually show a pseudonym for each one and also allow product searches.
When a user wants to buy something, he or she sends an order message (“I’ll take ten of your finest MDMA doses”) to the seller. If the seller agrees, the buyer and seller together choose what DarkMarket calls an “arbiter.” Since the market doesn’t have any central authority, the arbiter’s job is to settle any disputes–to serve as a tie breaker in any stalemate that might arise if the deal goes sour. Both the buyer and seller can keep a list of approved arbiters, and one will be chosen at random from the overlapping names on their lists. “The arbiter is just another peer on the network,” says Swanson. “Just as anyone can be a buyer or seller, anyone can be an arbiter.”
Once the buyer, seller and arbiter for a transaction are chosen, DarkMarket creates a new Bitcoin address that will serve as the escrow, holding the buyer’s money until the transaction is complete. But this isn’t any run-of-the-mill Bitcoin address; It combines the three users’ public encryption keys, created based on a private encryption key generated when they installed DarkMarket, to offer what’s known as a “multisignature” address. That address is designed so that once the buyer’s bitcoins go into it, they can only be moved again if two out of three of the parties agrees and signs that transaction with the private key that controls their Bitcoins.
The buyer moves his or her money to the escrow address. If the product is shipped and arrives, the buyer and seller both sign a transaction to move the escrowed bitcoins to the seller. If the product doesn’t arrive–or if it’s defective, or some other dispute arises–the buyer and the seller may both try to move the bitcoins into their own account. In that case the arbiter can choose which transaction to sign, which determines where the coins end up. The arbiter can also demand a payment for his or her services, which would be split off from the bitcoins.
After a transaction, every participant can leave ratings and reviews for every other participant. Those reputation measurements are cryptographically signed with the writer’s private key so that they can’t be forged, and copied to other nodes on the network. When a user visits a seller page, the ratings and reviews for that seller are pulled from other nodes to display the seller’s track record, preventing fraud and rewarding good customer service.
To create consistent identities and prevent untrustworthy users from impersonating trusted ones, DarkMarket nodes keep a list of all the public keys and nicknames of every user on the network. This ledger of names and keys is periodically put through a cryptographic function known as a hash and added to the Bitcoin blockchain by including it in a small transaction. That trick prevents anyone from altering the ledger to steal someone’s identity; When a user searches for a nickname on DarkMarket, the software looks at the blockchain to check the user’s key against the ledger before displaying that user’s seller page. (So far, Taaki has made DarkMarket’s identities to the Bitcoin blockchain manually, but he says he plans to automatic the process.)

If DarkMarket improves and catches on among contraband traders, it’s not exactly clear what legal risks Taaki and his fellow coders might be taking. Taaki argues that he’s merely distributing a program–not running a criminal conspiracy. “I’m just a humble coder,” he says. “Code is a form of expression. You can’t imprison someone for speaking an idea.”

And if the creators of a fully peer-to-peer black market were to be locked up? If all goes according to plan, their leaderless community would go about business as usual.

Here’s a video made by an audience member at Taaki and Swanson’s presentation of DarkMarket at the Toronto Bitcoin Expo.

http://www.wired.com/2014/04/darkmarket/

singular_me
25th April 2014, 05:22 AM
notice the inverted pyramid in their logo... from bottom up pyramid... to decentralize, I prefer to advocate for interest free local currencies, which are legal, and are spreading. IMHO

is it the same darkmarket?

[ast week the FBI and its global partners wrapped up a two-year undercover cyber operation that resulted in 56 arrests worldwide, the prevention of $70 million in potential losses, and the confirmation that while there might be honor among thieves, in the end, they are still just thieves.

Here’s what happened:

...A discerning group of cyber criminals established a forum on the Internet called “Dark Market,” where they bought and sold stolen financial information such as credit card data, login credentials (user names and passwords), and even electronic equipment for carrying out financial crimes.
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2008/october/darkmarket_102008



Welcome to DarkMarket – global one-stop shop for cybercrime and banking fraud
• Personal data and tutorials in hacking offered online
• Founder of site traced to London internet cafe
Thursday 14 January 2010 14
http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2010/jan/14/darkmarket-online-fraud-trial-wembley

Ares
25th April 2014, 05:50 AM
notice the inverted pyramid in their logo... from bottom up pyramid... to decentralize, I prefer to advocate for interest free local currencies, which are legal, and are spreading. IMHO

is it the same darkmarket?

[ast week the FBI and its global partners wrapped up a two-year undercover cyber operation that resulted in 56 arrests worldwide, the prevention of $70 million in potential losses, and the confirmation that while there might be honor among thieves, in the end, they are still just thieves.

Here’s what happened:

...A discerning group of cyber criminals established a forum on the Internet called “Dark Market,” where they bought and sold stolen financial information such as credit card data, login credentials (user names and passwords), and even electronic equipment for carrying out financial crimes.
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2008/october/darkmarket_102008



Welcome to DarkMarket – global one-stop shop for cybercrime and banking fraud
• Personal data and tutorials in hacking offered online
• Founder of site traced to London internet cafe
Thursday 14 January 2010 14
http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2010/jan/14/darkmarket-online-fraud-trial-wembley

Nope not the same DarkMarket. This one takes the black market idea and completely decentralizes it. Say you install the software and run it but never do any searching or surfing over it. You are still contributing to the network for connectivity and storage. It's a pretty brilliant idea. It leaves it available to totally anonymize yourself over it as well if the code is modified to support some different protocols.

Cebu_4_2
25th April 2014, 05:55 AM
Man Faces Jail After Trading Drugs For Bitcoins
A man who allegedly made $3m (£1.8m) selling drugs on underground website Silk Road faces up to 40 years in prison. 10:55am UK, Friday 25 April 2014
http://media.skynews.com/media/images/generated/2014/4/25/304828/default/v1/167577081-1-522x293.jpg Drugs were allegedly traded for Bitcoins (File pic)





Email (?subject=Shared%20from%20Sky%20News:%20Man%20Face s%20Jail%20After%20Trading%20Drugs%20For%20Bitcoin s&body=Shared%20from%20Sky%20News:%20Man%20Faces%20J ail%20After%20Trading%20Drugs%20For%20Bitcoins%20h ttp://news.sky.com/story/1249205)


A man faces 40 years behind bars for allegedly trading cocaine for Bitcoins on the illicit Silk Road website.
Federal prosecutors say Dutchman Cornelis Jan Slomp has agreed to plead guilty in Chicago to charges alleging he sold illegal drugs for millions of dollars.
Jan Slomp, of Worden, the Netherlands, was charged on Thursday with conspiracy to import and distribute controlled substances including ecstasy, amphetamine and cocaine.
The 22-year-old was arrested in August 2013 at Miami International Airport after travelling from Europe.
http://media.skynews.com/media/images/generated/2014/4/25/304827/default/v1/187784134-1-522x293.jpg Cornelis Jan Slomp was arrested at Miami International Airport Prosecutors say he was planning to meet with co-conspirators about spinning off his Silk Road operations.
As well as up to four decades in prison, he also faces a $5m (£2.9m) fine and the forfeiture of his $3m (£1.8m) fortune.
A court date has not been set for him to enter his plea. Bloomberg said his attorney confirmed the intention to plead guilty in a phone interview.
The Silk Road - an online black market used to buy drugs and hitmen - was shut down by the FBI in October last year.
http://media.skynews.com/media/images/generated/2013/10/2/262645/default/v1/grab-2-522x293.jpg Silk Road was shut down by the FBI last year The website, dubbed the eBay of the drug trade, used a privacy-protecting Tor network and Bitcoin digital currency to shield the identities of buyers and sellers around the world.
US Attorney Zachary Fardon said sites like Silk Road are the new frontier of drug distribution.
"Illegal drug-trafficking is not new, but drug-trafficking using a sophisticated underground computer network designed to protect anonymity of buyers and sellers presents new challenges to law enforcement that we are prepared to meet."
Court records show Silk Road had nearly a million registered users worldwide when it closed.


Related Stories
Silk Road: Millions In Bitcoins Forfeited (http://news.sky.com/story/1196627/silk-road-millions-in-bitcoins-forfeited)

iOWNme
25th April 2014, 05:56 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=COisLGwnb-M



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6VFopiRaXwQ