There are lots of reasons to wear a mask, some good and some
not so good. On Halloween, kids
have mostly harmless fun by donning masks and dressing up as their favorite
cartoon characters, or anything else their imagination (and their parents) can
come up with. But criminals also
wear masks to conceal identity for nefarious purposes. At least in Western countries, I'm not
aware of any law against simply wearing a mask, although you have to choose
your circumstances carefully.
Outside of Halloween or a costume party, a person walking around in a
mask may be suspected of either serious eccentricity or illegal doings.
When you go online these days, your identity is as obvious
to websites you visit as it is in person.
Cookies and easily purchased commercial databases make it easy for both
individuals and companies to identify you and figure out things about you that
you may not even be aware of yourself.
So wouldn't it be convenient if there was some way to wear a mask on the
Internet? It turns out that there
is: a type of freeware called Tor,
which was developed with support by, believe it or not, the U. S. Naval
Research Laboratory, and still largely supported financially by the U. S.
government. Tor has recently been
used for a lot of underhanded doings, most prominently the Silk Road affair.
A fellow going by the online name of Dread Pirate Roberts (a
character who always wears a mask in the cult-classic movie The Princess Bride) designed a clandestine
website called Silk Road to deal in illegal drugs and other illicit
material. To protect both his own
identity and those of his customers, he required users to communicate with him
using Tor, which virtually guarantees anonymity on the Web. The medium of exchange on Silk Road was
bitcoin, a virtual currency that is also (virtually) untraceable and often used
for illegal transactions.
Dread Pirate Roberts, whose real name was Ross William
Ulbricht, eventually made enough mistakes online, such as using his real email
address on occasion, to allow the FBI to catch up with him last October. He is now awaiting trial on numerous
charges, and may wish that he'd never heard of Tor. So why is the government supporting software used by
criminals?
Just as kids at Halloween usually don't mean any harm by
wearing masks, there are legitimate reasons to be anonymous on the Web. Suppose you are a dissident in a
country run by a nasty dictatorship.
Using Tor can allow you to communicate over the Internet with fellow
dissidents or supporters outside your country. Law enforcement agencies do not care to have their
confidential online activities viewable or traceable by all and sundry, and I'm
sure that domestic and international security issues were an important driving
force behind the Naval Research Lab's support of Tor. But because it's cross-platform freeware, just about anybody
with a computer and enough knowhow to install a Web browser can don a Tor mask
online and instantly become very hard to trace. It's a little like a digital invisibility cloak, and we all
know what happened to the Invisible Man:
nothing good.
That is not to say that anyone using Tor will inevitably
develop bad habits of flaming websites anonymously and dealing in child porn or
crystal meth, payable in bitcoin.
But the developers who decided to make Tor widely available as freeware
were making a decision that they may not have explored the full implications
of. Just to move the situation in
imagination to the physical world, suppose Wal-Mart came up with a good, cheap
invisibility drug and decided to make it free for everybody, and the Wal-Mart
greeters handed it out as you walked in the door. I'm sure there are legitimate reasons to be invisible, but
my guess is that the vast majority of people who decided to take advantage of
the offer would do things that are inadvisable at best, and more probably
illegal, immoral, and maybe even fattening. (Don't like the way you look? Become invisible and who can tell?) I'm not liking where
that fantasy is going, so I think I'll stop here.
No one I have read on this subject is saying that defects in
Tor led to Ulbricht's arrest, or that we should rethink whether Tor ought to be
freely available. The fact that
it's not that well known makes it unlikely that we'll see a rash of online
crimes committed by newly invisible Internet users. But Tor enables the existence of what various news articles
on the Silk Road incident have referred to as the Deep Web or the Dark Web,
because Tor renders a website invisible to the usual search engines and so
on. For most commercial websites,
their problem is increasing their visibility, not the other way around, so they
have no incentive to use Tor. But
for sites dealing with unpopular, persecuted, or illegal activities, Tor is
still available.
Ulbricht is awaiting trial, so I should refer to him as the
"alleged" mastermind of Silk Road, although the evidence pointing to
him is pretty convincing. Whatever
the other facts of the case may be, Ulbricht's use of Tor did make it harder
for the FBI to catch him, just as masks make it more difficult to identify a
guy who knocks over the convenience store down the street. But there are other ways to catch
crooks, and it looks like we will all just have to get used to a world where
you can wear a mask on the Internet as well as in real life.
Sources: I referred to articles on the Silk Road
affair published in the online version of Time
magazine at http://nation.time.com/2013/10/04/a-simple-guide-to-silk-road-the-online-black-market-raided-by-the-fbi/
and by the website Verge at http://www.theverge.com/2013/10/2/4795502/the-fbi-busted-silk-road-but-not-the-dark-web-behind-it,
as well as the Wikipedia articles "Tor (anonymity network)" and
"The Princess Bride." My
blog "Bitcoin: Currency of
the Future?" appeared on Oct. 16, 2011.
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