Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

TDXD16001ENN

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 140

INSIGHTS

EN
ISSN 2314-9264

The internet
and drug
markets

21

The internet
and drug
markets

EMCDDA project group


Jane Mounteney, Alessandra Bo and Alberto Oteo

21

Legal notice
This publication of the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) is protected by
copyright. The EMCDDA accepts no responsibility or liability for any consequences arising from the use of the data
contained in this document. The contents of this publication do not necessarily reflect the official opinions of the
EMCDDAs partners, any EU Member State or any agency or institution of the European Union.

Europe Direct is a service to help you find answers to your questions about the European Union

Freephone number (*): 00 800 6 7 8 9 10 11


(*)The information given is free, as are most calls (though some operators, phone boxes or hotels
may charge you).

More information on the European Union is available on the internet (http://europa.eu).


Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union, 2016
ISBN: 978-92-9168-841-8
doi:10.2810/324608
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, 2016
Reproduction is authorised provided the source is acknowledged.
This publication should be referenced as:
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (2016), The internet and drug markets, EMCDDA
Insights 21, Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg.
References to chapters in this publication should include, where relevant, references to the authors of each
chapter, together with a reference to the wider publication. For example:
Mounteney, J., Oteo, A. and Griffiths, P. (2016), The internet and drug markets: shining a light on these complex
and dynamic systems, The internet and drug markets (European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction:
Insights 21), Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg.

Praa Europa 1, Cais do Sodr, 1249-289 Lisbon, Portugal


Tel. +351 211210200
info@emcdda.europa.eu I www.emcdda.europa.eu
twitter.com/emcdda I facebook.com/emcdda

Contents
5

Foreword

Executive summary

11 Acknowledgements
13

CHAPTER 1
The internet and drug markets: shining a light on these complex and dynamic systems
Jane Mounteney, Alberto Oteo and Paul Griffiths

19

SECTION I

Dark net cryptomarkets

23

CHAPTER 2
Cryptomarkets and the future of illicit drug markets
Judith Aldridge and David Dcary-Htu

33

CHAPTER 3
Tor and links with cryptomarkets
Andrew Lewman

41

CHAPTER 4
Staying in the shadows: the use of bitcoin and encryption in cryptomarkets
Joseph Cox

49

CHAPTER 5
Reputation is everything: the role of ratings, feedback and reviews in cryptomarkets
Joseph Cox

57

Dark net markets key actor perspectives

61

CHAPTER 6
Silk Road: insights from interviews with users and vendors
Eileen Ormsby

69

CHAPTER 7
The emergence of deep web marketplaces: a health perspective
Fernando Caudevilla

77

CHAPTER 8
The drug trade on the deep web: a law enforcement perspective
Joost van Slobbe

85

CHAPTER 9
How the use of the internet is affecting drug trafficking practices
Anita Lavorgna

SECTION II

93

SECTION III

Surface web markets and social media

97 CHAPTER 10
A method for exploring the number of online shops selling new psychoactive substances:
initial I-TREND project results

Magali Martinez, Daniela Kmetonyov and Vendula Blkov
107 CHAPTER 11

Online supply of medicines to illicit drug markets: situation and responses

Lynda Scammell and Alessandra Bo
115 CHAPTER 12

Social media and drug markets

Danica Thanki and Brian Frederick
125 SECTION IV

Insights and implications
127 CHAPTER 13

What is the future for internet drug markets?

Jane Mounteney, Paul Griffiths and Liesbeth Vandam
135 Glossary

I Foreword
The EMCDDA has been monitoring the drug situation for the last 20 years. In that time,
the nature and range of drugs available has changed considerably and, in more recent
years, the manner in which people acquire drugs has also undergone a change. There has
been a shift from face-to-face purchases to also acquiring drugs through unseen, and
often unmonitored, parts of the world wide web. Almost any kind of illegal drug can be
purchased online and delivered by mail, without the buyer making direct contact with the
drug dealer.
In this first detailed exploration of the subject, we collate the most recent evidence from a
range of experts, each with his or her own unique perspective. Our compilation will add to
the collective knowledge available on this part of the supply chain and highlight the gaps
for future research. It does not claim to be complete or up to the minute. What it is,
however, is our inaugural in-depth analysis of a facet of the drugs phenomenon that the
agency has not yet explored extensively.
Searching on the internet today can be compared to dragging a net across the surface of
the ocean. While a great deal may be caught in the net, there is still a wealth of information
that is deep and, therefore, missed. Similarly, drug markets can make use of the various
levels of the web in order to operate. There is the surface web, often used for illicit
medicines and new psychoactive substances, and also the deep web, with its dark net
markets or cryptomarkets, supported by innovative technologies to protect privacy.
Furthermore, the proliferation of social media and development of web technologies that
allow greater user interaction have the potential to influence customer and user
involvement in drug markets.
We are delighted to release this investigation into the world of online drug markets.
Although at present, it appears that only a minority of drugs are purchased in this manner,
it seems likely that online drug markets could in the near future disrupt drug dealing in the
same way that eBay, Amazon and PayPal have revolutionised the retail experience.
This report is destined for both readers with a previous specialised knowledge and those
trying to gain insight into a new and rapidly evolving topic. Along with information on what
the deep web is, how it operates, the role of The Onion Router in the anonymous sale and
purchase of illegal drugs, the role of encryption and cryptocurrencies, the content raises
certain questions. For example, how will illicit drugs be marketed and trafficked in the
future? Are the current tools and responses fit for purpose? How can the EMCDDA address
the challenges of monitoring such a dynamic and fast-changing environment?
Alexis Goosdeel
Director, EMCDDA

I Executive summary
I Background
The last decade has seen the emergence of new internet technologies that have acted as
important facilitators of online drug markets. Historically, illicit drug retail markets have
operated in physical spaces, with associated practical limitations and boundaries. The
development of virtual markets changes the dynamics of the selling and buying process,
potentially opening the market up to a wider audience.
Drug markets operating on the surface, or clear, web appear to be primarily associated with the
distribution of either non-controlled substances or substances for which legal controls differ
between countries and jurisdictions (medicines, lifestyle products, new psychoactive
substances, precursor chemicals). Online pharmacies have flourished, broadening their
supplies from lifestyle products to performance enhancement products and prescription drugs.
A rapid expansion of the online market for new psychoactive substances has been observed
over the last decade, with these substances sold as both research chemicals and legal highs
in online shops. Alongside these markets, the growth of social media has seen the emergence
of forums and mobile applications where drugs are discussed, advertised and sometimes sold.
This publication aims to unravel some of the complexities surrounding online markets:
what they are, how they operate, the technologies underlying them and how they interact
with the traditional drug market. Expert contributions come from a number of individuals
who attended a meeting in Lisbon to share experiences and knowledge on the topic of the
internet and drug markets. They represent a wide range of international expertise on both
the deep web and the surface web, providing insights from IT, research and monitoring,
law enforcement and drug user perspectives.

I Dark net markets


Recently, attention has shifted to the sale of drugs and other illicit products and services in
what have become known as dark net markets or cryptomarkets, which exist in what is in
effect a hidden part of the internet that is not accessible through standard web browsers.
Dark net markets represent a notable innovation in the online drug trade and one of the
main appeals is the relative anonymity they provide to users wishing to purchase illicit
goods and services. A range of strategies are used to hide users identities and conceal the
physical locations of servers. These include anonymisation services, such as Tor (The
Onion Router), which hide a computers IP address when accessing the site; decentralised
and relatively untraceable cryptocurrencies, such as bitcoin and litecoin, for making
payments; and encrypted communication between market participants. Reputation
systems play a central role in the functioning of dark net markets. They help regulate
vendors and are used by buyers to inform their purchasing decisions.
Both demand reduction and supply reduction interventions on the surface web have been
gathering pace. The deep web, however, has provided new opportunities and challenges
for both health and law enforcement professionals. A number of studies cited by authors in
this publication suggest that Silk Road may have helped users reduce the harm caused by
illicit drug use, particularly compared with street-based drug marketplaces. Examples
include the sale of high-quality products with low risk for contamination, vendor-tested
products, sharing of trip reports and online discussion of harm reduction practices. There
appears to be a growing interest in the provision of health-related interventions directly to
users of the deep web, and DoctorX, for example, has offered a range of services to dark
net market users, including information, advice and drug-testing services.

The internet and drug markets

For law enforcement agencies, online monitoring represents a new approach to tackling
drug markets, and they continue to build experience in this area. Law enforcement
strategies have focused on market disruption, which includes reducing trust around
anonymity, as well as the identification, arrest and prosecution of sellers in cryptomarkets.
At the EU level, Project: ITOM (Illegal Trade on Online Marketplaces) has established an EU
cybercrime network, with one of its tasks being to establish effective ways to combat the
illegal trade within online marketplaces.

I Surface web markets


Several studies have explored the online supply of new psychoactive substances, or
so-called legal highs, through shops on the internet. The I-TREND (Internet Tools for
Research in Europe on New Drugs) project aimed to develop a software-automated tool for
monitoring online shops using a less resource-intensive method than had been available
previously. This showed the need to take duplicate sites into consideration to understand
the reality of online supply. In some cases, online shops target individual countries, with
the type of shops available and the substances offered influenced by cultural factors and
structural characteristics of national drug markets.
The online sale of medicines has expanded since the early 2000s and, although various
platforms have been used, online pharmacies have been a primary source of distribution.
In the early days, the most popular products supplied on the web were natural and herbal
medicinal products, smoking cessation aids, and beauty and sexual performance
enhancement products. More recently, the market for enhancement drugs such as muscle
builders and diet pills has been expanding. Although there is increasing concern about the
potential role of illegally operating online pharmacies in the supply of psychoactive
medicines for misuse, there is little evidence to suggest they are an important source of
medicines for illicit drug markets at present.

I Social media
The growth of social media has revolutionised methods of communication and social
interaction with each other. Drug-related content exists across social media: on social
networking sites, in drug-themed apps, on video- and picture-sharing services and in drug
forums. Furthermore, virtual social networks provide opportunities for drug-related
encounters and there is evidence that this is happening particularly among small groups of
men who have sex with men. There is also some evidence of drug selling through social
media, often using drug slang.
There remains insufficient evidence, however, about the role of social media in the supply
of drugs. There is also a need to identify ways in which the research and monitoring
community and prevention and treatment agencies can harness social media to better
understand drug use and to improve demand reduction responses.

I A multiplicity of interconnected marketplaces


A wide range of factors appear to be driving change and development in internet drug
markets; most are linked to technology, globalisation and market innovation. There is a
consensus that the internet has changed drug markets by expanding possibilities for drug
supply and trafficking. Research indicates that drug markets have become hybrid markets
that combine the traditional social and economic opportunity structures with the new
opportunities provided by the internet. Furthermore, not only has the internet opened the

Executive summary

way for new criminal actors, but it has also reconfigured relations among suppliers,
intermediaries and buyers.
Drug trafficking patterns are constantly changing. Identifying patterns of criminal
behaviour and matching them to different cyber-hotspots could have important
implications for tackling offenders and potential offenders in the internet age. More
criminological research is needed to take into consideration transformations in technology,
society and crime caused by the internet, and to allow new preventative thinking on
reducing criminal opportunities in cyberspace.

I Acknowledgements
The EMCDDA would like to thank the following expert contributors who provided the
content for this publication: Judith Aldridge, Fernando Caudevilla, Joseph Cox, David
Dcary-Htu, Brian J. Frederick, Daniela Kmetonyov, Anita Lavorgna, Andrew Lewman,
Magali Martinez, Eileen Ormsby, Lynda Scammel and Joost van Slobbe. We are also
grateful to all of the experts who contributed to our technical report entitled The internet
and drug markets (available at emcdda.europa.eu/publications/technical-reports/
internet-drug-markets) which inspired this EMCDDA Insights.
EMCDDA contributors (in alphabetical order): Alessandra Bo, Andrew Cunningham,
Charlotte Davies, Michael Evans-Brown, Paul Griffiths, Jane Mounteney, Alberto Oteo,
Alessandro Pirona, Blanca Ruiz, Danica Thanki and Liesbeth Vandam.

11

CHAPTER 1

The internet and drug markets:


shining a light on these complex and
dynamic systems
Jane Mounteney, Alberto Oteo and Paul Griffiths

I Background: drug market dynamics


The last decade has seen the emergence of new
internet technologies that have acted as important
facilitators of online drug markets. Historically, illicit
drug retail markets have operated in physical spaces,
with associated practical limitations and boundaries.
Whether taking place in a city-centre open drug scene
or in a dealers flat on a suburban housing estate,
low-level drug sales have typically been associated
with tangible people, places and geographical spaces.
New developments have enabled the growth of online
commerce in virtual marketplaces with global reach.
This has the potential to expand the boundaries of drug
supply and provide more opportunities for those
wishing to buy drugs to do so. Virtual drug markets also
offer participants the opportunity to sell and shop from
their own homes, avoiding the face-to-face encounters
associated with offline markets. Participants report
that this can provide a degree of anonymity and
physical safety that would otherwise be difficult to
attain.
Technology has always been linked with changes in
drug markets. A recent example is the widespread use
of mobile phones, which has allowed the buying and
selling of drugs to move out of more openly accessible
physical spaces and into closed networks of known
contacts. The development of virtual markets changes
the dynamics of the selling and buying process further,
potentially opening the market up to a wider audience,
with participants unlikely to be known to each other.
Thus, such markets may represent to participants the
best of both worlds: open markets operating in a covert
manner.
In reality, not all aspects of drug markets can take place
in a virtual world. Both the production and distribution
phases remain firmly linked to tangible real-world
processes. Physical transactions, often involving postal
delivery, must still take place.

Recent evidence suggests that practically any type of


drug can be bought on the internet. Drug markets
operating on the surface, or clear, web appear to be
primarily associated with the distribution of either
non-controlled substances or substances for which legal
controls differ between countries and jurisdictions
(medicines, lifestyle products, new psychoactive
substances, precursor chemicals). Online pharmacies
have flourished, broadening their supplies from lifestyle
products to performance enhancement products and
prescription drugs. A rapid expansion of the online
market for new psychoactive substances has been
observed since 2008, with these substances sold as
both research chemicals and legal highs in online
shops. A market for the supply of precursor and preprecursor chemicals has also been identified. Alongside
these markets, the growth of social media has seen the
emergence of forums and mobile applications where
drugs are discussed, advertised and sometimes sold.
More recently, attention has shifted to the sale of drugs
and other illicit products and services in what have
become known as dark net markets or cryptomarkets,
which exist in what is in effect a hidden part of the
internet that is not accessible through standard web
browsers. Cryptomarkets represent a notable innovation
in the online drug trade. Software enabling
anonymisation (e.g. The Onion Router) or encryption
(e.g.PGP) and cryptocurrencies (e.g. bitcoin) provides a
high level of anonymity for buyers and sellers, and drugs
are delivered through the post, avoiding direct contact
between the parties involved.
Although some commentators suggest that this
virtualisation of drug-related trading, with forums
providing user advice and ratings on sellers and their
products, may reduce criminality, violence and
intimidation in drug markets (Barratt et al., 2013;
Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, 2014; Van Hout and Bingham,
2014), the speed with which the internet is transforming
drug markets poses a major challenge to law

13

The internet and drug markets

enforcement, public health, and research and monitoring


agencies.

The EMCDDA study on the internet


and drug markets

With a view to shedding further light on this complex


topic and fast-changing environment, in autumn 2014,
the EMCDDA initiated a mixed method study on internet
drug markets, aiming to map out the territory and better
understand the potential impact of this phenomenon.
The objectives of this study were to increase
understanding of the online supply of drugs with a focus
on the sale of new psychoactive substances, research
chemicals and legal highs; the use of social media and
apps; online sales of medicinal products for illicit use;
and the sale of drugs on the deep web. The study
methodology incorporated a number of investigative
approaches and used data from multiple sources, and
the work culminated in a meeting attended by
international experts. During the meeting, the experts
shared their experiences and contributed to an analysis
of the topic, providing insights from IT, research and
monitoring, law enforcement and drug user
perspectives. Given the importance of the topic and the
quality of knowledge and expertise shared during the
meeting, it was decided to initiate a joint publication in
which many of the meeting participants would be given
the opportunity to share their insights in a structured
way.
The 13 chapters of this publication on the internet and
drug markets are the result of this endeavour and
incorporate contributions from over 20 authors. By
design, this is a heterogeneous work, drawing on the
different backgrounds and world views of the multiple
authors. It is the unique combination of different
perspectives, including from academia, journalism and
frontline practice, that makes this work rich and
informative, offering a global overview of the situation
alongside more detailed technical insights into specific
aspects of this complex area.

I A note on terminology
Perhaps unsurprisingly, given the novelty of the
discipline, there are both overlaps and some
discrepancies in the way certain terms are used in the
scientific and popular literature. Below, we define how a
number of key terms are used in this publication when

14

referring to online drug marketplaces. We note, however,


that certain authors have preferred usage that may differ
from these definitions, and have used editorial discretion
to allow variation in some cases. An example here is that
some authors use the term dark net markets while
others prefer cryptomarkets. Readers should note that a
more detailed glossary section can be found at the end
of this publication, on page 135.
The surface or clear web is the part of the internet that
can be found by the link-crawling techniques used by a
typical search engine such as Google, Bing or Yahoo
(http://www.brightplanet.com). On the other hand, the
deep web is a part of the internet not accessible to these
search engines. The only way to access the deep web is
by conducting a search within a particular website.
Government databases and libraries, for example,
contain huge amounts of deep web data.
The dark web or dark net is defined as a small portion of
the deep web that has been intentionally hidden and is
inaccessible through standard web browsers. The dark
net can be accessed only using additional software such
as the Tor Browser (Bright Planet, 2013), and it is the
portion of the internet most widely known for illicit
activities, because of the anonymity it offers to users.
Tor is an acronym for The Onion Router; it is free
browsing software that hides a computers IP address,
enabling online anonymity and protecting the personal
privacy of the internet user. The relatively recent
development of usable interfaces with anonymity
networks such as Tor has made it easy for anybody to
browse the internet anonymously, regardless of their
technical ability. It allows, for example, military
operations to avoid being tracked and enables any
individual to browse the internet protected from traffic
analysis. However, this has also facilitated the
emergence of anonymous online markets specialising in
black market goods, such as pornography, weapons
and drugs (Christin, 2013; Aldridge and Dcary-Htu,
2014).
Cryptomarkets or dark net markets are located in the
dark web and accessed via Tor. A cryptomarket can be
defined as an online forum where goods and services
are exchanged between parties who use digital
encryption to conceal their identities (Martin, 2014). To
date, most studies on online drug markets have centred
on cryptomarkets, and in particular on Silk Road, one of
the earliest cryptomarkets to be established. Silk Road
began operating in February 2011, and captured
worldwide media and political attention following an
expose in the New York-based blog Gawker (Chen, 2011;
Martin, 2014). Although it was not the only drug

CHAPTER 1 IThe internet and drug markets: shining a light on these complex and dynamic systems

cryptomarket, it was certainly the largest and best


known (Barratt et al., 2014). Others, such as Black
Market Reloaded, The Armory, Evolution and Agora have
offered similar services.
It is important to note that bitcoin and encryption, as well
as Tor, serve the legitimate purpose of protecting ones
privacy. Individuals might wish to opt out of having their
internet browsing habits recorded and stored, or to
spend their own finances without the intermediation of a
bank; journalists can use such technology to protect
their sources. Although these technologies are used for
criminal purposes, criminals are by no means their only
users.
In the following sections, we briefly introduce the main
online market segments and the thematic areas covered
in more detail by the individual chapters in this
publication.

I Online anonymous drug marketplaces


On the deep web, drug sales can take place within a
marketplace (e.g. Silk Road), within a decentralised
network or between individuals. However, it is the dark
net drug markets, also referred to as cryptomarkets, that
have received most attention. Silk Road is to date the
best known and most researched cryptomarket, and
within this publication it functions almost as a case
study. Although the situation has changed and many
other markets have opened and closed, the information
gathered around the first and, at the time, largest
cryptomarket provides unique and invaluable insights.
Although it differed in offering anonymity, Silk Road
provided a similar infrastructure for sellers and buyers to
conduct transactions to those provided by other online
marketplaces such as eBay, with professional dispute
resolution mechanisms, use of vendor and buyer ratings,
hosting of member discussion forums, and so on.
Although a wide variety of products was advertised on
Silk Road, established recreational drugs such as
cannabis, MDMA and LSD, and some prescribed
medicines, were reported to be the most popular
(Barratt et al., 2014), while the sale of new psychoactive
substances on the dark net markets seems to be limited.
Silk Road maintained the secrecy of its operators and
location by combining two technologies: Tor and bitcoin.
Tor enables anonymous communication between buyer
and seller, and bitcoin can be used to facilitate
anonymous transactions. Silk Road used bitcoins as a
trading currency. Instead of paying the seller directly,

buyers placed the corresponding number of bitcoins in


escrow with Silk Road, and payments were only released
to vendors when the item reached its destination and
the delivery was confirmed. In fact, cryptocurrencies
such as bitcoin are not anonymous (as there is a central
ledger) and they require laundering (e.g. using a website
such as Bitcoin Fog) if they are to be used for illicit
activity. An important feature of Silk Road was that both
sellers and buyers received ratings, with trust built on
reputation. This system, explained in more detail in
Chapter 5, was weakened by various scams.

I Drug markets on the surface web


I Legal highs, research chemicals and trade sites
The use of the surface web for the sale of new
psychoactive substances is a topic that has received
increasing attention over the last decade. The online
market for these substances has been categorised into
four primary segments: shops selling new psychoactive
substances as research chemicals, mostly under their
chemical names; a commercial segment, with products
sold under brand names; classified ads, often located
within public websites; and a deep web segment (Lahaie
et al., 2013). The EMCDDA has been involved in online
monitoring for a number of years and identified 651
websites selling legal highs to Europeans in 2013
(EMCDDA, 2015). New methods for automated
monitoring of this area are being developed by the
I-TREND (Internet Tools for Research in Europe on New
Drugs) project and are reported on in Chapter 10. In
addition to the methodologies used, the project team
describe some recent developments in the online new
psychoactive substances market including increased
hybridisation between the commercial and research
chemical segments and the development of a grey
market, with some websites having both a surface web
presence and a hidden element on the deep web.

I Online pharmacies
Online sales of medicines increased substantially in the
early 2000s (Forman, 2006), and, although various
platforms have been used, online pharmacies have been
a primary source of distribution for both the legitimate
and the illicit supply of medicinal products. Legitimate
websites are those that comply with national and
international regulations and standards, thus
guaranteeing the quality of the product; sell controlled
medicines only with a valid medical prescription; and

15

The internet and drug markets

ultimately ensure consumer safety. Reports suggest,


however, that there are a sizeable number of illegitimate
online pharmacies involved in the illicit supply of
products. These sites are not registered with any
recognised accreditation system and do not abide by
regulations and professional standards; therefore, they
are operating illegally. There is concern that illegitimate
online pharmacies may have a role in the supply of drugs
for misuse. This is an area explored in more detail in
Chapter 11, drawing on the limited studies available in
this area.

substances or legal highs in the last 12 months, only


3% had purchased them from the internet. In contrast,
68% had been given them or had bought them from a
friend (European Commission, 2014).

I Social media and apps

There are a limited number of studies on those buying


drugs from dark net marketplaces. Van Hout and
Bingham (2013) described the motives and purchasing
experiences of a small group of Silk Road users. These
were predominantly male and in professional
employment or tertiary education. Their patterns of drug
use were described as typically recreational and
confined to weekend consumption, and several
participants referred to themselves as psychonauts. The
majority reported commencing internet drug sourcing on
Silk Road with little prior experience of cyber drug
retailing prior to 2011 and finding out about the site by
chance, for example when Googling, watching TV or
browsing Craigslist. Van Hout and Bingham concluded
that the need for a conscious decision on the part of the
user to access Silk Road, as well as for technical
resources and expertise, combined with the time
needed for delivery, appears to exclude more vulnerable
consumers. One of the conclusions here is that internet
supply assumes planned drug use which may explain
why drugs such as MDMA appear to be more popular
online. This raises important questions about whether or
not and how the online market changes purchasing
behaviour and consumption. Have those buying drugs
from the internet bought drugs (the same ones in the
same quantity) elsewhere?

Social media are Web 2.0 technologies, characterised by


increased participation and multidirectional lines of
communication. They largely operate on the surface
web, although Facebook, for example, has recently
allowed access to its services through Tor. Social media
may have an active role in drug markets, with sites and
apps being used for buying and selling drugs, or they
may have a more indirect role, providing a platform for
experience sharing, photo and video sharing, opinion
forming, and so on.
As explained in Chapter 12, many forms of networking
might best be described as taking place on virtual social
networks (VSNs), rather than online social networks, as
much communication takes place via smart phones and
tablets. VSNs can be categorised into static networks,
which are more permanent and may include user profiles
and terms of use (e.g. Facebook), and dynamic networks
(e.g. Skype or ooVoo video chat), which are temporary
and often by invitation only. A feature of VSNs is the
creative use of slang and argot to get around
moderation. Static (and especially) dynamic VSNs that
use webcams have been recently associated with
chemsex parties and/or slamming among men who
have sex with men.

Who uses the internet to obtain


drugs?

There is limited information available on the customers


or users of street and virtual drug markets, with limited
survey data tending to focus on overall sources of drug
supply. These data indicate that, for most people who
use drugs, the internet plays only a limited role in supply.
The 2014 Flash Eurobarometer, a telephone survey of
13128 young adults aged 1524 in the 28 EU Member
States found that, of those who had used new

16

Numbers may be higher, however, in certain drug- and


internet-savvy groups. The results of the Global Drug
Survey 2015, an online survey that attracted more than
100 000 responses from individuals around the world
about their drug use, showed that just over 1 in 10
respondents reported buying drugs via conventional
internet sites and dark net sites in the previous year.

Given the relatively low levels of internet purchasing, an


important area explored further in this publication is the
extent to which bulk or wholesale purchases of drugs are
occurring online. Evidence is presented in Chapter 2 to
suggest that drug dealers may be the primary customers
for some dark net markets.

I Dark net markets and interventions


Both demand reduction and supply reduction
interventions on the surface web have been gathering
pace (EMCDDA, 2013; Interpol, 2015). The deep web,
however, has provided new opportunities and challenges

CHAPTER 1 IThe internet and drug markets: shining a light on these complex and dynamic systems

for both health and law enforcement professionals. A


number of studies cited by authors in this publication
suggest that Silk Road may have helped users reduce
the harm caused by illicit drug use, particularly
compared with street-based drug marketplaces.
Examples include the sale of high-quality products with
low risk for contamination, vendor-tested products,
sharing of trip reports and online discussion of harm
reduction practices (Barratt et al., 2013; Van Hout and
Bingham, 2013, 2014). There appears to be a growing
interest in the provision of health-related interventions
directly to users of the deep web, and DoctorX (www.
elsubmarinodeldoctorx.com; see Chapter 7) offers a
range of services to dark net market users, including
information, advice and drug-testing services.
For law enforcement agencies, online monitoring
represents a new approach to tackling drug markets, and
they continue to build experience in this area, as
described in Chapter 8. Law enforcement strategies are
primarily focused on market disruption, which includes
reducing trust around anonymity, as well as the
identification, arrest and prosecution of sellers in
cryptomarkets. Undercover officers may engage in
covert operations by infiltrating markets, becoming a
trustworthy buyer and arranging a face-to-face meeting.
More overt tactics involve making individuals aware of
police presence and ensuring that the takedown of
markets receives media attention. At the EU level,
Project: ITOM (Illegal Trade on Online Marketplaces) has
established an EU cybercrime network, with one of its
tasks being to establish effective ways to combat the
illegal trade within online marketplaces.

I A note on the structure of this publication


This publication is divided into four sections. In the first,
the reader will find a series of chapters introducing dark
net markets and their role, function and interaction with
traditional drug markets, as well as the infrastructure
and technology that support their operation. Section 2
includes a group of chapters that build on this topic by
providing perspectives from different dark net market
actors: drug users, health professionals and law
enforcement practitioners. Section 3 expands the focus
to look at a range of surface web drug markets, some of
which overlap and interact with dark net drug supply. The
final section pulls together some insights into and
implications for the future in this area.

I References
I

 ldridge, J. and Dcary-Htu, D. (2014), Not an eBay for


A
Drugs: the cryptomarket Silk Road as a paradigm shifting
criminal innovation. Available at: http://ssrn.com/
abstract=2436643 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/
ssrn.2436643

 arratt, M. J., Lenton, S. and Allen, M. (2013), Internet content


B
regulation, public drug websites and the growth in hidden
internet services, Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 20,
pp. 195202.

 arratt, M. J., Ferris, J. A. and Winstock, A. R. (2014), Use of


B
Silk Road, the online drug marketplace, in the United Kingdom,
Australia and the United States, Addiction 109, pp. 774783.

 hen, A. (2011), The underground website where you can buy


C
any drug imaginable. Available at: http://gawker.com/
the-underground-website-where-you-can-buy-any-drugimag-30818160

 hristin, N. (2013), Traveling the Silk Road: a measurement


C
analysis of a large anonymous online marketplace,
Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on World
Wide Web, International World Wide Web Conferences
Steering Committee, Rio de Janeiro.

EMCDDA (2013), Perspectives on drugs: Internet-based drug


treatment, Perspectives on Drugs series, European Monitoring
Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, Lisbon.

EMCDDA (2015), European drug report 2015: trends and


developments, European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and
Drug Addiction, Lisbon.

 uropean Commission (2014), Young people and drugs: Flash


E
Eurobarometer 401.

 orman, R. F. (2006), Narcotics on the net: the availability of


F
web sites selling controlled substances, Psychiatric Services
57, pp. 2426.

I nterpol (2015), Operation Pangea, 2015, http://www.interpol.


int/Crime-areas/Pharmaceutical-crime/Operations/
Operation-Pangea

 ahaie, E., Martinez, M. and Cadet-Tarou A. (2013), New


L
psychoactive substances and the Internet: current situations
and issues, Tendances 84, Observatoire Franais des
Drogues et des Toxicomanies (OFDT). Available at: http://en.
ofdt.fr/publications/tendances/new-psychoactivesubstances-and-internet-tendances-84-january-2013/

 artin, J. (2014), Lost on the Silk Road: online drug


M
distribution and the cryptomarket, Criminology and Criminal
Justice 14(3), pp. 351367.

 an Hout, M. C. and Bingham, T. (2013), Surfing the Silk


V
Road: a study of users experiences, International Journal of
Drug Policy 24, pp. 524529.

 an Hout, M. C. and Bingham, T. (2014), Responsible vendors,


V
intelligent consumers: Silk Road, the online revolution in drug
trading, International Journal of Drug Policy 25(2), pp.
183189.

17

SECTION I

Dark net cryptomarkets

CHAPTER 2

Cryptomarkets and the future of illicit drug


markets
CHAPTER 3

Tor and links with cryptomarkets


CHAPTER 4

Staying in the shadows: the use of bitcoin and


encryption in cryptomarkets
CHAPTER 5

Reputation is everything: the role of ratings,


feedback and reviews in cryptomarkets
19

I Overview
In Chapter 2, Judith Aldridge and David Dcary-Htu provide a brief
introduction and history of the development of cryptomarkets on the deep
web. They explore the impact of cryptomarkets on local and global drug
markets, present some results from their own investigations of Silk Road
marketplace shortly before it was taken down, and finally they offer
consideration how drug cryptomarkets may be likely to impact on the
global drugs trade should they should they continue to grow.
In the deep web, cryptomarkets facilitating drug trafficking have flourished
during recent years due to the combination of anonymising software such
as Tor, cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, and encrypted messaging. The Tor
Browser enables users to anonymously host and browse content (e.g.
websites) and services within a vast address space. In Chapter 3, Andrew
Lewman, former director of the Tor Project, explains how this technology
works, how it is used to create cryptomarkets and how law enforcement
agencies are trying to identify criminals using it. He provides insight into the
technical infrastructure that supports cryptomarkets and gives the reader a
glimpse of what the next generation of these marketplaces might look like.
In Chapter 4, Joseph Cox follows up on the previous chapter by introducing
the two other essential technologies that have made cryptomarkets
possible: cryptocurrencies and encryption, explaining the process of
Bitcoin transactions from their purchase to their exchange for regulated
currency. He explains the rationale for using encryption and the tools that
make it possible, as well as the process cryptomarket users go through to
keep their communications anonymised. In Chapter 5, Joseph Cox provides
the reader with an introduction to the role of ratings, feedback and reviews
in cryptomarkets, including a look at why vendor reputation matters and
how these systems may be abused.
21

CHAPTER 2

Cryptomarkets and the future of illicit


drug markets
Judith Aldridge and David Dcary-Htu

I Introduction
A cryptomarket is an online marketplace platform bringing
together multiple vendors and listing mostly illegal and
illicit goods and services for sale. Cryptomarkets have the
same look and feel as surface web, or clear web,
marketplaces such as eBay and Amazon, and they allow
their customers to search and compare products and
vendors. What differentiates these markets from
established clear web marketplaces, however, is that they
offer anonymity. Cryptomarkets employ a range of
strategies to hide the identities of their participants, make
transactions anonymous and conceal the physical
locations of servers. These include anonymisation
services, such as Tor (The Onion Router), that hide a
computers IP address when accessing the site (see
Chapter3); decentralised and relatively untraceable
cryptocurrencies, such as bitcoin and litecoin, for making
payments; and encrypted communication between
market participants. Like some others (e.g. Barratt, 2012;
Martin, 2013) we employ the term cryptomarkets,
following early use of this term in hacker forums, but we
note that the term dark net markets is also gaining
currency (e.g. Buxton and Bingham, 2015).
Although the academic research literature on
cryptomarkets is growing (e.g. Barratt, 2012; Barratt et al.,
2013, 2014; Martin, 2013, 2014; Van Hout and Bingham,
2013a, 2013b, 2014; Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, 2014, in
press; Phelps and Watt, 2014; Buxton and Bingham,
2015; Dolliver, 2015; Dcary-Htu et al., in press), our
understanding of these marketplaces has been shaped in
no small part by journalists (e.g. Bartlett, 2014) (1),
bloggers (e.g. Ormsby, 2014) and other independent
researchers (e.g. Branwen, 2015). Through a combination
of these efforts, we are able here to piece together
evidence about and conjecture on the implications of
cryptomarkets(2) for global and local drug markets.
(1) Also Wired, http://www.wired.com/author/andygreenberg
(2) It is important to note that our understanding of cryptomarkets is
limited by the fact that these markets are, by their very nature, hidden. The
ones that have come to the attention of researchers and others interested

This chapter begins by sketching a brief history of these


markets and the technologies that gave rise to them. We
chart the growth of the first cryptomarket, Silk Road, its
demise, and the proliferation since of such marketplaces
in spite of law enforcement activities. We show that,
despite the growth and popularity of these markets, they
tend to be short-lived, and their success substantially
hampered by the growth of mistrust amongst market
participants due to scams and, to a more limited extent,
law enforcement activities. At present, cryptomarkets
represent only a tiny fraction of the global drug trade.
Their effect on how illicit drugs change hands is therefore
minimal in global terms. Their potential for expansion is
hampered by the fact that, given the risks of making
international shipments, vendors elect to ship
domestically in the absence of strong push factors to
do otherwise, and by the fact that the postal system
through which all shipments must ultimately reach their
destination remains a weak link. Nevertheless, drug
cryptomarkets have substantial advantages for both
buyers and sellers, and should be considered, we argue,
a significant drug market innovation. They allow vendors
operating on these markets to sell to unknown
customers (thus shifting drug markets back to open, as
opposed to the closed markets many have become as a
result of mobile phone technology) and to do so on a
global scale; their appeal to drug sellers and their
customers cannot be ignored.
We then consider how drug cryptomarkets, or some
decentralised version of these (see Buxton and
Bingham, 2015), may be likely to impact on the global
drug trade should they overcome existing obstacles,
continue to grow and ultimately flourish. Cryptomarkets
allow for the possibility of a direct link between drugusing buyers and producers, growers or synthesisers of
illicit drugs, and may eventually serve to cut out some of
the middle level of the market. On the other hand, we
know that a substantial proportion of cryptomarket
in documenting their activities tend to be English language and
dominated by drug sales.

23

The internet and drug markets

customers are drug dealers themselves, sourcing stock


to sell offline, thereby allowing cryptomarkets to function
in a middle market location. We conclude that both of
these characterisations are likely to be true, depending
on the drug in question. Finally, we consider the
possibility that drug cryptomarkets may have some
capacity to reduce the harm caused by drug markets by
reducing the violence sometimes associated with these
markets by virtue of their virtual location.

I A brief history of drug cryptomarkets


Silk Road was the first cryptomarket devoted
predominantly to the sale of illicit drugs, including
cannabis, a wide range of psychedelic drugs, stimulant
drugs such as cocaine, and prescription medications
(Christin, 2013). Drugs were purchased online from
vendors displaying eBay-style shopfronts and delivered
through postal services. Buyers were protected by a
system of escrow: they paid for their purchases in the
anonymous and difficult to trace cryptocurrency bitcoin
(so no need for identity-carrying credit card payments),
but payments were not released to vendors until buyers
were satisfied with their deliveries (Aldridge and DcaryHtu, 2014). This market functioned successfully
because it was part of the hidden or dark web, where all
communications are anonymised by the Tor service. The
site was launched in February 2011 and ran successfully
for over two and a half years until the US FBI seized it on
2October2013.
Within weeks of Silk Roads closure, Silk Road2.0 was
launched, although by this time rival marketplaces were
vying for dominance. One of these, Sheep, quickly grew
to a size comparable to that of Silk Road, but a few
weeks later its administrators shut down the site,
claiming that a user had exploited a security loophole
and stolen 5400 bitcoins of their users money (at the
time worth around USD6million) (Pangburn, 2013),
although many believed this was an exit scam by the
marketplace administrators, designed to enable them to
abscond with the funds themselves. Throughout 2014,
marketplaces grew in size, with Pandora, Agora, Hydra,
Evolution and Silk Road2.0 competing to win back the
trust of vendors and buyers once the possibility of
scams by marketplace administrators became apparent.
Another exit scam by market administrators occurred on
18March2015, when the Evolution marketplace closed,
with administrators reportedly having stolen
USD12million from buyer and seller accounts (Woolf,
2015), with others since this time.

24

In November 2014, a little over a year after the original


operation against Silk Road, cryptomarkets were hit once
again by law enforcement agencies in Europe and the
United States, in Operation Onymous. This time, multiple
marketplaces were targeted, including Silk Road2.0,
Cloud9 and Hydra (Department of Justice, 2014).
Although many smaller marketplaces were also shut
down, only the administrator of Silk Road2.0 was
arrested, alongside a small number of vendors. What
was reportedly unique to this particular operation,
however, was the undercover agent who had been
involved from the start of the market working as an
administrator (Afilipoaie and Shortis, 2015). As a result,
the very aspect of cryptomarkets that provided their
users with confidence in the platform anonymity
may simultaneously have undermined that confidence;
anonymity obscures the identities of criminals and law
enforcement actors alike.
In spite of scams and law enforcement efforts, however,
cryptomarkets continue to proliferate. Independent
researcher Gwern Branwen, who has been
systematically documenting and archiving these
markets, found that 43 new markets opened in 2014 and
46 markets closed. Most of these closures, he estimates,
were due to scams by marketplace administrators (or
outside hacks), with only six closures attributable to law
enforcement. Of the markets remaining in operation,
nine opened during 2014 (Branwen, 2015). Soska and
Christin (2015) found that these marketplaces are
extraordinarily resilient, with law enforcement takedowns resulting primarily in vendor displacement to
other marketplaces. In summary, cryptomarkets tend to
have a fairly short life, and their longevity is reduced
more by scams than by law enforcement crackdowns.
Our own data collection efforts tell us that, at the time of
writing, four marketplaces are open, each with over
1000 active listings.
The emergence of online sales of illicit drugs has been
detailed by Buxton and Bingham (2015). They, and
Martin (2014), refer to Markovs description of marijuana
transactions as far back as 1971 between students at
Stanford University and MIT using technology at the
artificial intelligence laboratories that became the
foundation of the internet. As we and others have
discussed elsewhere (Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, 2014;
Buxton and Bingham, 2015; Dcary-Htu and Aldridge,
2015), however, cryptomarkets are the direct
descendants of markets for a range of illegal goods and
services that emerged in the late 1990s and early
2000s. These markets were hosted in Internet Relay
Chat (IRC) chat rooms and online discussion forums,
providing participants with virtual locations where they
could meet to arrange transactions. These first-

CHAPTER 2 ICryptomarkets and the future of illicit drug markets

generation online criminal markets were popular but not


engineered for security; indeed, they did little to
obfuscate the location of their servers. This led to a
series of highly publicised arrests and shutdowns
(Poulsen, 2012), and enabled law enforcement officials
to access public and private messages as well as logs of
connections, leading them directly to market
participants. These markets, furthermore, were not
terribly efficient; it was difficult to assess before
purchase the trustworthiness of vendors or the quality of
the goods and services they sold. Because of the
rudimentary security features of these online platforms,
therefore, criminal operators could face a considerable
degree of victimisation both from vendors and platform
administrators (Dcary-Htu and Aldridge, 2015).
Cryptomarkets, the second-generation online criminal
markets, represent a step change in criminal innovation
(Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, 2014). Visually, they look just
like any other legitimate online marketplace (eBay, for
example): they bring together a range of vendors in one
location, each listing products for sale, and allow
customers to comparison-shop. They offer the same
opportunities for networking and carrying out business
transactions as the first-generation criminal markets, but
in a much more secure environment. Cryptomarkets did
not invent any technology per se, but they brought
together four security measures never used in
conjunction before. First, cryptomarkets require that
participants make their payments in virtual currencies
such as bitcoin. Transactions made in virtual currencies
are exceptionally difficult to trace and their use does not
entail checks by regulatory agencies, for example in
relation to anti-money laundering legislation. Second,
cryptomarkets require that their participants use an
anonymising protocol, such as Tor or the Invisible
Internet Project (I2P), to hide their identities when
connecting to them. Cryptomarkets also take advantage
of these protocols to hide their IP addresses, thereby
hindering the ability of law enforcement to seize their
servers. The remaining two measures are aimed at
providing buyers with security and confidence in relation
to their transactions. Cryptomarkets use escrow
systems, and finally, they employ feedback or purchase
review systems similar to those found on large online
merchant sites such as Amazon and eBay. Buyers can
check the feedback scores for vendors and their
products to help them evaluate the likelihood that they
will be buying the product they want from a trusted
vendor (Van Hout and Bingham, 2013).

The impact of cryptomarkets on global


and local drug markets

A number of estimates by Christin (2013) and by


Aldridge and Dcary-Htu (2014) of revenue
generation(3) on Silk Road before it was first shut down
suggest that the marketplace generated around
USD16.7million in 2012 and USD89.7million in
2013(4). Estimating the value of the global trade in illicit
drugs, by comparison, is notoriously difficult (Reuter and
Greenfield, 2001). Estimates regularly quoted in the
media that ostensibly derive from the United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) estimates range
from USD300billion to USD1.3trillion annually, but the
methodologies employed, it has been argued, generate
little more than wild guesses (Thoumi, 2005). Even in the
absence of a sensibly derived estimate of the global drug
trade, however, we can be sure that sales on
cryptomarkets are likely to represent only a tiny fraction
of the global drug trade.
This should be unsurprising, since the bulk of supply and
trafficking activities in the worldwide drug trade rely on
conventional interpersonal networks of drug
manufacturers, wholesalers and brokers (Martin, 2014).
At first glance, then, it seems unlikely that cryptomarkets
will have had much of an impact on traditional drug
markets.
However, as Martin goes on to argue persuasively:
Cryptomarkets transform conventional drug sales by
facilitating the creation of global networks of offenders.
These networks comprise both vendors and purchasers
of illicit drugs who, once online, are able to conduct a
range of illicit activities not only on an unprecedented
scale, but also with a degree of freedom that
significantly exceeds what is possible through
conventional, interpersonal criminal networks.This
suggests that cryptomarkets facilitate a form of illicit
drug sales that is qualitatively different from the
conventional, offline variety. (Martin, 2014, p.10)

(3) These estimates were made possible by the automated feedback


system that strongly encouraged buyers to leave feedback on vendors, so
that feedback could be used as a proxy measure for a transaction with
reasonable confidence. Our research indicated that about 88% of buyers
posted publicly available feedback after a purchase (Aldridge and
Dcary-Htu, in press). By multiplying the number of transactions
received by the price of a listing, it was possible to estimate the sales
generated on cryptomarkets with a high level of certainty.
(4) By the time of its closure, the first Silk Road was a well-functioning,
confident, successful and growing market; no cryptomarket since has
operated with the same success or in an environment with the same
confidence, and, even if some of these second-generation markets
generate high revenues, their instability and short lifespans suggest that
our best source of data about a well-functioning cryptomarket remains
the first Silk Road.

25

The internet and drug markets

In other words, it seems likely that the kind of trade


facilitated by drug cryptomarkets may not simply replace
conventional trade but supplement it, for example by
catering to a different kind of buyer, able to purchase a
range of substances not previously available to them.
Christin (2014) has recently underlined the importance
of this question for future research: do cryptomarkets
primarily displace drug purchases from traditional
markets or instead provide access to drugs for those
without previous access?
We have already discussed the loss of confidence in
cryptomarket platforms on the part of both buyers and
vendors following scams and law enforcement activities,
creating a potential limiting factor for the future growth
of drug cryptomarkets, but there are additional factors
that may impose limitations on the growth of these
markets. Access to them requires a degree of
technological knowledge; for example, a buyer needs to
understand how to use Tor or another anonymising
service and how to purchase and use a cryptocurrency.
Some of those who are willing and able to learn to use
these services may simply mistrust the security they
afford, particularly in light of media coverage of arrests
associated with cryptomarkets. Furthermore,
cryptomarket drug purchases require advance planning:
some drug users may be unwilling to plan their drug use
sufficiently in advance, preferring instead to make
purchases from known dealers, in person, who can
supply their requirements as and when the desire for
consumption arises. Another limitation on the growth of
cryptomarkets arises from the fact that drugs must be
sent using postal systems, with the accompanying risks
that result from monitoring and seizure, which can take
place both within and at borders. It seems likely that
some drug users may be unwilling to purchase from
cryptomarkets because of a reluctance to have illicit
drugs sent to them through the post, perceiving that
doing so carries risks and preferring their existing access
to drugs through known and trusted retail dealers.
This concern about the risks of sending/being sent illicit
drugs through the post may be heightened where drugs
are shipped across international borders. Shipping
across borders carries greater risks for both vendors and
their buyers because of the increased chance that a
package will be searched and confiscated. From the
vendors point of view, this increases the risk of customer
dissatisfaction if a package is not received, potentially
affecting the vendors ever-important feedback rating.
From the customers point of view, having illegal goods
shipped to an address formally connected to them might
be a risk they are especially unwilling to take if those
packages risk being confiscated or held at borders.
Shipments across international borders also simply take

26

more time and cost more than purchases made within


local jurisdictions. For all these reasons, both customers
and vendors may prefer illegal goods to be shipped only
within their own countrys borders.
The authors own research, based on data collected from
Silk Road in September 2013, just before closure,
confirmed this: vendors generally chose only to ship
domestically (71% of US vendors, for example) unless
there were substantial push factors to do otherwise.
Our multivariate analysis found six such push factors: (i)
insufficient domestic demand for illicit drugs; (ii) a
perceived lower effectiveness of law enforcement,
making it safer for vendors to operate internationally with
impunity; (iii) a lower GDP per capita that limits the
purchasing power of local customers; (iv) a lower vendor
rating which makes it more difficult to compete on the
national level against vendors who have a perfect rating
score; (v) the scope of the products offered by vendors
measured by the number of listings offered and; (vi) the
sale of smaller packages (as measured in weight) given
that it should be easier for these packages to pass
through the inspections at the borders undetected
(Dcary-Htu et al., in press). These results suggest that,
although cryptomarket vendors can theoretically sell in a
global marketplace, many elect not to in the absence of
substantial factors pushing them to do so.
Even though cryptomarkets still have a minor market
share in the overall illicit drug trade, evidence suggests
that they may be expanding. Research by Barratt et al.
(2014) using Global Drugs Survey data suggests that,
among survey respondents who usually buy their own
(primarily recreational) drugs, access to drugs via the
first Silk Road was not insubstantial. In Australia, the
United Kingdom and the United States, 7%, 10% and
18% of the sample (respectively) had consumed drugs
purchased via the first Silk Road, and just over half of
these had self-purchased (between 5 and 10%).
Customers appreciate the ease of access and the quality
and range of products that cryptomarkets offer, as well
as perceiving these markets as providing them with a
higher level of security than street drug markets (Barratt
et al., 2014). Drug sellers perceive the likelihood of arrest
to be substantially reduced and appreciate access to a
much larger potential market of buyers (Van Hout and
Bingham, 2014).
This last point cryptomarket vendors having access to a
larger market of buyers has important implications for
the potential effects of drug cryptomarkets on local and
global drug markets. Cryptomarket dealers can effectively
transcend the physical restrictions of a local drug market
the limited number of people they could physically
reach to transact with to supply, through postal

CHAPTER 2 ICryptomarkets and the future of illicit drug markets

delivery, a (potentially) worldwide market. In recent years,


many drug markets have moved from open to closed, in
which drug dealers sell only to those customers with
whom they have trusted relationships (see May and
Hough, 2004). However, cryptomarkets reverse this
arrangement, with vendors able to transact with unknown
customers, whom they encounter only in the virtual
sphere (Aldridge, 2012; Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, 2014).
There is some debate about the extent to which drug
cryptomarkets, if they continue to proliferate and grow,
will change the structure of drug markets. To the extent
that these markets allow a direct link between drug-using
customers and producers, cryptomarkets may serve to
cut out some of the middle or wholesale level in the drug
market chain (Martin, 2013) and/or may reduce the links
in the chain between producer and end-user. We have
argued, in contrast, that cryptomarkets may instead in
part function at the middle level of the drug market.
Our evidence is derived from an analysis of the nearly
12000 listings on Silk Road downloaded in September
2013, only weeks before it was shut down by the FBI
(Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, in press). Wholesale-level
revenue generation (sales for listings priced over
USD 1 000) accounted for about a quarter of the revenue
generation on the first Silk Road overall. Ecstasy-type
drugs dominated wholesale activity on this marketplace,
but we also identified substantial wholesale activity for
benzodiazepines and prescription stimulants. Less
important, but still generating wholesale revenue, were
cocaine, methamphetamine and heroin. Although vendors
on the marketplace were located in 41 countries,
wholesale activity was confined to only a quarter of these,
with China, the Netherlands, Canada and Belgium
prominent. The terminology employed by vendors in some
instances made this explicitly clear; for example, one
cannabis seller stated: This is a mid-grade commercial
hash perfect for resale due to the low price. The fact that
vendors gave substantial discounts for bulk purchase
seems likely to have further facilitated the likelihood that
purchases made there by drug dealers could have made
for profitable offline resale (Aldridge and Dcary-Htu,
2014). These large-sized purchases could have been
made by customers for a number of reasons, such as for
personal use over a long period or social supply (with the
purchases made by one individual on behalf of a group of
friends) (Aldridge et al., 2011; Coomber and Moyle, 2013).
However, the sometimes very large prices/sizes of the
purchases provide compelling evidence that a substantial
proportion of customers on Silk Road were drug dealers
sourcing stock.
Therefore, Silk Road functioned as a virtual broker,
connecting upper-, mid- and retail-level sellers. So

although it is possible, as Martin (2013) argued, that


drug cryptomarkets may directly connect producers/
synthesisers with drug users buying for their own use,
thereby cutting out the middle level of the market, our
findings suggest that cryptomarkets may also perform a
middle market function. It seems likely that both of these
characterisations may be true simultaneously,
depending on the drug in question. We suspect, for
example, that direct produceruser transactions are
more likely for the kinds of drugs where small-scale
producers can operate without large-scale international
networks (cannabis, for example, and easy-to-produce
psychedelic drugs such as mushrooms, varieties of
NBOMe and DMT). These direct produceruser
transactions seem much less likely for drugs such as
cocaine or heroin, both of which require large-scale
international networks for distribution. We have not yet
disentangled the potential effects that the online drug
trade has on global and local markets in this regard, and
this remains a fruitful avenue for future research.
Finally, we consider the possibility that cryptomarkets
may have the capacity to reduce the harm caused by
drug markets in some important ways. Others (e.g.
Ormsby, 2014; Van Hout and Bingham, 2014; Caudevilla,
see Chapter7) refer to the online culture of harm
reduction that was evident in the first Silk Road, and
many have referred to the high level of purchase
satisfaction amongst its customers, suggesting that
drug quality may be superior to that in traditional retail
drug markets. Recent research by Caudevilla (see
Chapter7) shows positive results on the quality of
cryptomarket purchases for 129 samples submitted by
cryptomarket customers to Energy Controls testing
service. In 120 (93%) of the samples submitted, the
drug that customers thought they had purchased was
the only psychoactive substance detected. The purity of
cocaine samples submitted (n=54) was high (mean
70.4% purity) compared with that we see reported for
street seizures in the United Kingdom, for example,
which averaged 38% in 2013 (Burton et al., 2014). In
addition to the possibility of these markets being good
in this sense for drug users, these markets may also be
good for drug dealers and for the environments in which
they operate. Before the advent of online availability of
bulk-quantity illicit drugs, dealers had to have on-theground connections and relationships of trust built with
middle-level drug dealers and/or importers in order to be
able to acquire product (McCarthy and Hagan, 2001;
Morselli, 2001), as well as a tough reputation (Topalli et
al., 2002). With the advent of the cryptomarket, almost
anyone with sufficient technological skills can access
stock. In other words, the type of subcultural capital
(Thornton, 1995) required to be a drug dealer is likely to
be different for those who operate on a cryptomarket.

27

The internet and drug markets

This new type of drug dealer is also likely to be relatively


free from the violence typically associated with traditional
drug markets (Caulkins and Reuter, 2009). Traditional
illicit markets do not have the state (police, trading
standards) to adjudicate disputes; in virtual markets, the
marketplaces have regulatory mechanisms that function
in this way (escrow, seller and buyer trust metrics,
marketplace adjudication of disputes), removing some of
the unstable factors in illegal markets. Because of the
virtual location of online drug markets, in addition to the
presence of conflict-reducing features such as escrow
and bitcoin, violence and theft are likely to be reduced. It
is probable that these changes will have a deep impact on
the skills needed to succeed in criminal markets. In the
drug cryptomarket era, having good customer service and
writing skills, and a good reputation, via feedback, as a
vendor or buyer may be more important than muscles and
face-to-face connections.
Although it may seem self-evident that the virtual
location of online drug markets should reduce violence
because interactions there occur in virtual rather than in
physical space, this potential capacity of cryptomarkets
to reduce harm may have limitations. Our research
(Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, 2014, in press) showed that
cryptomarket customers are likely to include drug
dealers sourcing stock to sell offline. For this reason,
cryptomarkets remain anchored in offline drug markets,
with vendors there also purchasing offline to sell online.
The requirement, therefore, to operate either wholesale
purchase or retail sales in offline drug markets means
that cryptomarket users may still be victims and
perpetrators of violence connected with these face-toface transactions. In addition, harm can manifest itself in
forms other than real-world violence: threats; damage to
reputation; doxing (hacking and then threatening to
expose the victims identity) and other forms of
blackmail; theft and fraud; and cyber-bullying. Finally, the
violence associated with drug markets may be culturally,
politically and socially conditioned (Bourgois, 2003;
Johnson et al., 2006), rather than arising as a function of
the illegal market itself. To the extent that these external
conditions remain unchanged, the ability of
cryptomarkets to reduce violence and conflict may be
limited. All these questions need to be addressed
empirically.

I Conclusion
Cryptomarkets are still very much in their infancy. Market
administrators are learning how best to protect their
activities and their participants from law enforcement,
while law enforcement actors are learning how to

28

investigate and clamp down on this drug market


innovation. One important question must therefore be
asked: given the potential weve discussed here for harm
reduction to arise from the online drug trade for drug
dealers, for users and within the markets themselves
should drug cryptomarkets be a high priority for law
enforcement? We might consider reframing the problem:
instead of deeming cryptomarkets problematic because
the criminals operating there are harder for law
enforcement to reach, perhaps we should consider the
possibility that cryptomarkets reduce the problems
associated with this kind of criminality. The extent to
which harm might actually be reduced by cryptomarkets,
however, remains an open question that requires
systematic empirical research.
The impact that cryptomarkets have will depend largely
on the shifting balance between the success of those
seeking to set up and run effective cryptomarkets with
longevity, on the one hand, and the investigative success
of law enforcement, on the other. Law enforcement may
seem to have the upper hand, having successfully
closed large cryptomarkets two years in a row. However,
the limited number of arrests made and quantity of
drugs seized, and the proliferation of markets that has
followed each law enforcement effort, suggest that
these police operations are having only a limited impact.
For now, it seems inevitable that the internet will
continue to be a source of drug market innovation.

I References
I

 filipoaie, A. and Shortis, P. (2015), Operation Onymous:


A
international law enforcement agencies target the dark net in
November 2014, GDPO Situation Analysis, Global Drug Policy
Observatory, Swansea.

 ldridge, J. (2012), Dealers in disguise: the virtualisation of


A
retail level drugs markets, http://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=q4ZsNuC2kqg

 ldridge, J. and Dcary-Htu, D. (2014), Not an eBay for


A
drugs: the cryptomarket Silk Road as a paradigm shifting
criminal innovation. Available at: http://ssrn.com/
abstract=2436643 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/
ssrn.2436643

 ldridge, J. and Dcary-Htu, D. (in press), Hidden Wholesale:


A
How drug cryptomarkets may transform traditional offline
drug markets, International Journal of Drug Policy.

 ldridge, J., Measham, F. and Williams, L. (2011), Illegal leisure


A
revisited: changing patterns of alcohol and drug use in
adolescents and young adults, Routledge, Sussex and New
York.

 arratt, M.J. (2012), Silk Road: eBay for drugs, Addiction 107,
B
pp.683684.

CHAPTER 2 ICryptomarkets and the future of illicit drug markets

 arratt, M.J., Ferris, J.A. and Winstock, A.R. (2014), Use of


B
Silk Road, the online drug marketplace, in the United Kingdom,
Australia and the United States, Addiction 109(5), pp.
774783.

 ohnson, B., Golub A. and Dunlap, E. (2006), The rise and decline
J
of hard drugs, drug markets, and violence in inner-city New York,
in Blumstein, A. and Wallman, J. (eds), The Crime Drop in
America, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp.164206.

 arratt, M.J., Lenton, S. and Allen, M. (2013), Internet content


B
regulation, public drug websites and the growth in hidden
Internet services, Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 20,
pp.195202.

 cCarthy, B. and Hagan, J. (2001), When crime pays: capital,


M
competence, and criminal success, Social Forces 79(3),
pp.10351060.

I
I

Bartlett, J. (2014), The dark net, Random House, London.

 artin, J. (2013), Lost on the Silk Road: Online drug


M
distribution and the cryptomarket, Criminology and Criminal
Justice, published online 7/10/2013, doi:
10.1177/1748895813505234.

 ranwen, G. (2015), 2014 in DNMs: by the numbers, http://


B
www.reddit.com/r/DarkNetMarkets/
comments/2r58vs/2014_in_dnms_by_the_numbers/

 artin, J. (2014), Drugs on the dark net: how cryptomarkets


M
are transforming the global trade in illicit drugs, Palgrave
Macmillan, Basingstoke.

 urton, R., Thomson, F., Visintin, C. and Wright, C. (2014), United


B
Kingdom drug situation: Annual report to the European
Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) 2014,
United Kingdom Focal Point at Public Health England, London.

 ay, T. and Hough, M. (2004), Drug markets and distribution


M
systems, Addiction Research and Theory 12(6), pp.549563.

 orselli, C. (2001), Structuring Mr. Nice: entrepreneurial


M
opportunities and brokerage positioning in the cannabis trade,
Crime, Law and Social Change 35(3), pp. 203244.

I
I

Ormsby, E. (2014), Silk Road, Macmillan, Sydney.

 helps, A. and Watt, A. (2014), I shop online recreationally!


P
Internet anonymity and Silk Road enabling drug use in
Australia, Digital Investigation 11(4), pp.261272.

 oulsen, K. (2012), Kingpin: how one hacker took over the


P
billion-dollar cybercrime underground, Random House, New
York.

 euter, P. and Greenfield, V. (2001), Measuring global drug


R
markets, World Economics 2(4), pp.159173.

 ourgois, P.I. (2003), In search of respect: selling crack in El


B
Barrio, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

 uxton, J. and Bingham, T. (2015), The rise and challenge of


B
dark net drug markets, Global Drug Policy Observatory,
Swansea.

 aulkins, J. and Reuter, P. (2009), Towards a harm-reduction


C
approach to enforcement, Safer Communities 8, pp.923.

 hristin, N. (2013), Traveling the Silk Road: a measurement


C
analysis of a large anonymous online marketplace, WWW
2013, International World Wide Web Conference Committee
(IW3C2), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, preliminary version revised in
November 2012. Available at: https://www.cylab.cmu.edu/
files/pdfs/tech_reports/CMUCyLab12018.pdf

 hristin, N. (2014), Commentary on Barratt et al. (2014): steps


C
towards characterizing online anonymous drug marketplace
customers, Addiction 109, pp.784785.

 angburn, D. (2013), Did one of the Silk Roads successors


P
just commit the perfect Bitcoin scam?, http://motherboard.
vice.com/blog/did-one-of-the-silk-roads-successors-justcommit-the-perfect-bitcoin-scam

 oomber, R. and Moyle, L. (2013), Beyond drug dealing:


C
developing and extending the concept of social supply of
illicit drugs to minimally commercial supply, Drugs:
Education, Prevention and Policy 21, pp.157164.

 oska, K. and Christin, N. (2015), Measuring the longitudinal


S
evolution of the online anonymous marketplace ecosystem,
SEC15 Proceedings of the 24th USENIX Conference on
Security, Washington, DC.

 cary-Htu, D. and Aldridge, J. (2015), Sifting through the


D
Net: Monitoring of online offenders by researchers, European
Review of Organised Crime 2(2), pp. 122141.

 ornton, S. (1995), Club cultures: music, media and


Th
subcultural capital, Polity Press, Cambridge.

 cary-Htu, D., Paquet-Clouston, M.-C. and Aldridge, J. (in


D
press), Drug cryptomarkets facilitating drug sales on a global
scale: An analysis of the factors that encourage or prevent
sales across international borders, International Journal of
Drug Policy.

 oumi, F.E. (2005), The Colombian competitive advantage in


Th
illegal drugs: the role of policies and institutional changes,
Journal of Drug Issues 35(1), pp.726.

 opalli, V., Wright, R. and Fornango, R. (2002), Drug dealers,


T
robbery and retaliation: vulnerability, deterrence and the
contagion of violence, British Journal of Criminology 42(2),
pp.337351.

 an Hout, M.C. and Bingham, T. (2013a), Silk Road, the


V
virtual drug marketplace: a single case study of user
experiences, International Journal of Drug Policy 24(5),
pp.385391.

 an Hout, M.C. and Bingham, T. (2013b), Surfing the Silk


V
Road: a study of users experiences, International Journal of
Drug Policy 24(6), pp.524529.

 epartment of Justice (2014), Dozens of online dark


D
markets seized pursant to the forfeiture complaint filed in
Manhattan Federal Court in conjunction with the arrest of the
operator of Silk Road 2.0, http://www.justice.gov/usao/nys/
pressreleases/November14/DarkMarketTakedown.php
 olliver, D.S. (2015), Evaluating drug trafficking on the Tor
D
Network: Silk Road2.0, the sequel, International Journal of
Drug Policy. Available at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/
science/article/pii/S0955395915000110

29

The internet and drug markets

30

 an Hout, M.C. and Bingham, T. (2014), Responsible vendors,


V
intelligent consumers: Silk Road, the online revolution in drug
trading, International Journal of Drug Policy 25(2), pp.183
189.

 oolf, N. (2015), Bitcoin exit scam: deep-web market


W
operators disappear with $12m, http://www.theguardian.
com/technology/2015/mar/18/bitcoin-deep-web-evolutionexit-scam-12-million-dollars

CHAPTER 3

Tor and links with cryptomarkets


Andrew Lewman

I Introduction
Recent years have seen the development of software
that allows individuals to browse the internet
anonymously and which supports the anonymous
hosting of content and services on the internet. This
chapter provides an introduction to Tor: how it works, its
hidden services feature and how cryptomarkets,
particularly those selling drugs, use its features. It also
gives an overview of the development of cryptomarkets
and the potential future of such markets.

I The Tor Project


The Tor Project(1) researches and develops software to
enable people to maintain their privacy and anonymity
while on the internet. The most popular product is the
Tor Browser(2), which has been downloaded hundreds
of millions of times over the past few years. The Tor
Browser is a web browser, much like a normal browser
such as Internet Explorer, Safari, Chrome or Firefox.
However, it has the Tor Network built in and enabled by
default. The Tor Network provides around 7000 relays(3)
(as of February 2015) for global usage. The Tor Network,
and the underlying Tor Browser software, both rely upon
a protocol known as onion routing. Onion routing was
originally a project of the US Naval Research
Laboratory(4) in the 1990s. The core of onion routing is
separating where you are in the world and on the
network from where you are connecting in the world and
on the network. Onion routing, and therefore the Tor
Browser, provides a flexible communications
infrastructure that is resistant to both eavesdropping
and traffic analysis. Eavesdropping is the ability of one
or many secret parties to see, record or otherwise listen
in to your communications with or without your
knowledge. Traffic analysis is the ability to infer who is

(1) http://www.theonionrouter.com/
(2) http://www.theonionrouter.com/projects/torbrowser
(3) http://metrics.torproyect.org/networksize.html
(4) http://www.onion-router.net/

talking to who, how much they talk and how frequent


their communications are.
As an analogy, think of your post office: the postal
system can learn how often you send letters or
packages, how large the letters or packages are, and
who the sender and recipient of each letter or package
is. This provides a simple example of how easy it is to
map your contacts and easily sort them into most
frequently contacted, most content sent/received, and
so on. On the internet, anyone eavesdropping on your
internet connection will be able to collect vast amounts
of data about you just by watching your connection to
the network. This is true regardless of the type of internet
connection, whether its from a mobile phone, or a fixed
line to your residence or office, or the Wi-Fi available at
your favourite coffee shop.
Onion routing works by wrapping your communications
in layers of encryption and routing them around the
world. The Tor Browser uses the Tor Network to
accomplish this encryption and global routing. The
following figures will help you to visualise how this
happens behind the scenes. Alice wishes to privately
browse the websites of Bob and then Jane. Perhaps Bob
is her favourite news website, and Jane is her favourite
social networking website.

FIGURE 3.1
The first stage of the Tor Browser as started on your
computer

How Tor Works: 1

Tor node
unencrypted link
encrypted link

Alice

Step 1: Alice's Tor


client obtains a list
of Tor nodes from
a directory server.

Dave

Jane

Bob

33

The internet and drug markets

FIGURE 3.2
The Tor Browser makes a connection through the Tor
Network

How Tor Works: 2

Tor node
unencrypted link
encrypted link

Alice

Step 2: Alice's Tor client


picks a random path to
destination server. Green
links are encrypted, red
links are in the clear.

Dave

Jane

Bob

What happens behind the scenes is that the Tor


Browser contacts special relays, known as directory
authorities, in the Tor Network; directory authorities
maintain a list of all possible relays at any given moment.
The Tor Browser downloads this information and builds a
list of plausible relays for selection. Figure3.1 shows the
basic setup. The Tor Browser software then chooses
three relays and builds a series of circuits directly from
your machine to each relay. Figure3.2 shows how this
works. If, after browsing Bobs website, Alice then wants
to browse Janes website, her Tor Browser easily
accommodates this request. It simply builds a new set of
circuits through the Tor Network and, following the same
logic as the first request, allows access to the new
destination, in this case Janes website. Figure3.3
shows how this occurs.
Relays are merely computers that switch traffic from one
computer to another. The computers can be your own
computer, one of the 7000 computers comprising the Tor
Network, or the destination youre trying to reach through
the Tor Browser. A virtual circuit is a means of transporting

FIGURE 3.3
The Tor Browser then browses another website using
the same circuit as before

How Tor Works: 3

Tor node
unencrypted link
encrypted link

Alice

Step 3: If the user wants


access to another site,
Alice's Tor client selects
a second random path.
Again, green links are
encrypted, red links are
in the clear.

Dave

Jane

Bob

data over a computer network in such a way that it


appears as though there is a dedicated physical layer link
between the source and destination end systems of these
data. Relays run the Tor software, which enables them to
talk to you, other relays or destinations on the Internet.
Circuits are connections through the relays on which your
traffic flows from start to finish. Circuits in Tor are typically
active for 10 minutes before being pulled down and
created with a different set of relays.
Lets extend the postal service analogy to how Tor works.
Alice wants to send a letter to Bob, but because of the
sensitivity of the materials, she wants to keep it private.
Alice writes out three envelopes: one to Alfred, one to
Barbara and one to Charles. She puts her materials for
Bob into the envelope for Charles. She then puts the
envelope for Charles into the envelope for Barbara.
Finally, she puts the Barbara envelope into the Alfred
envelope. Alice takes this stuffed envelope to the post
office. Its then sent to Alfred. Upon receiving the
envelope, Alfred opens it up and drops the envelope for
Barbara in the post to her. The post office then delivers
this envelope to Barbara. When it arrives, she opens the
envelope and sees a letter for Charles. Barbara hands
this letter to the postal service, which then delivers it to
Charles. Charles receives the letter and sends it off to
Bob. Finally, after having the materials delivered through
Alfred, Barbara and Charles, Bob opens his envelope and
views the materials from Alice. Imagine Alfred, Barbara
and Charles are in different countries. Someone
watching each individual postal system could learn
about each individual point, but not that the original
message went from Alice to Bob.

I Hidden services with Tor


The Tor Browser also provides a feature known as hidden
services(5). This is the ability to anonymously host and
browse content and services within a vast address
space. A hidden service needs to advertise its existence
in the Tor Network before clients will be able to contact
it. Therefore, the service randomly picks some relays,
builds circuits to them and asks them to act as
introduction points by telling them its public key. Note
that in Figures 3.13.3 the green links are circuits rather
than direct connections. By using a full Tor circuit, it is
hard for anyone to associate an introduction point with
the onion servers IP address. Although the introduction
points and others are told the hidden services identity
(public key), they do not discover the onion servers
location (IP address).
(5) http://www.theonionrouter.com/docs/hidden-services.html.en

34

CHAPTER 3 ITor and links with cryptomarkets

The hidden service then assembles a descriptor,


containing its public key and a summary of each
introduction point, and signs this descriptor with its
private key. It uploads that descriptor to a distributed
hash table (6). The descriptor will be found by clients
requesting XYZ.onion, where XYZ is a 16-character
name derived from the services public key. After this
step, the hidden service is set up.
A client that wants to contact a hidden service needs to
learn its onion address first. After that, the client can
initiate connection establishment by downloading the
descriptor from the distributed hash table. If there is a
descriptor for XYZ.onion (the hidden service could be
offline or have left long ago, or there could be a typo in
the onion address), the client now knows the set of
introduction points and the right public key to use. At this
point, the client also creates a circuit to another
randomly picked relay and asks it to act as rendezvous
point by telling it a one-time secret.
When the descriptor is present and the rendezvous point
is ready, the client assembles an introduce message
(encrypted to the hidden services public key) including
the address of the rendezvous point and the one-time
secret. The client sends this message to one of the
introduction points, requesting that it be delivered to the
hidden service. Again, communication takes place via a
Tor circuit: nobody can relate the introduce message to
the clients IP address, so the client remains anonymous.
The hidden service decrypts the clients introduce
message and finds the address of the rendezvous point
and the one-time secret in it. The service creates a
circuit to the rendezvous point and sends the one-time
secret to it in a rendezvous message.
In the last step, the rendezvous point notifies the client
about successful connection establishment. After that,
both client and hidden service can use their circuits to
the rendezvous point for communicating with each
other. The rendezvous point simply relays (end-to-end
encrypted) messages from client to service and vice
versa.
In general, the complete connection between client and
hidden service consists of six relays, three of them
picked by the client (the third being the rendezvous
point) and the other three picked by the hidden service.
The details of these messages and hidden service
protocols are further described in the rendezvous
specification(Lewman, 2015).

(6) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_hash_table

I The current state of hidden services


Hidden services have attracted the attention of the
research community. The research community has tried
to both challenge (Murdoch, 2006; verlier and
Syverson, 2006a) and enhance (verlier and Syverson,
2006b) the anonymity provided by hidden services.
Further research aims to gather basic data on the
content hosted in a set of published hidden services
(Biryukov et al., 2013). The Memex project by the US
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has been
working to identify all available hidden services
published over time ( 7 ). The goal is to develop a search
engine-like interface to the automatically indexed data
set. This will allow for easier demographic determination
of content and services available in onion land.
A recent blog post by the Tor Project(8) looks at the
volume of hidden services traffic. It estimates that there
are around 30000 active hidden services serving
around 5 terabytes of information daily. Compared with
the 268million available domains(9), this is a small
number.
Independently of Tor, there is a general-purpose search
engine for hidden services at Ahmia(10). Its mission is to
create a working search engine for indexing, searching
and cataloguing content in the Tor onion space. The
website provides some data suggesting that, as of 12
February 2015, around 2274 hidden services
existed(11). Much like Google, Yahoo and Bing all have
different counts of how many websites exist on the clear
internet, so do Tor and Ahmia for the hidden internet.
One difference that accounts for Tor Projects and
Ahmias differing numbers is that Ahmia only counts
websites that are available to be indexed. Tor Project
counts total hidden services available, which includes
non-website addresses.

I Cryptomarkets
I The first iteration
A certain type of hidden service website has gained
notoriety through the attention of the global media. The
most written about and well-known website is the Silk
( 7 ) C. White on http://www.darpa.mil/Our_Work/I2O/Programs/Memex.
aspx
(8) https://blog.torproject.org/blog/somo-statistics-about-onions
(9) http://www.domaintools.com/statistics/tld-counts/ (retrieved
12/2/2015)
(10) https://ahmia.fi/search/
(11) https://ahmia.fi/stats/viewer

35

The internet and drug markets

Road marketplace. Silk Road was a unique black market


created as a hidden service with a custom-generated
domain name, now defunct, silkroad6ownowfk.onion.
What helped Silk Road, and the now many clones of it,
work and survive for years was a combination of Tor
hidden services and the digital currency bitcoin(12). The
heavy use of cryptography in both products, which were
the basic building blocks of the market, spawned the
term cryptomarket. In essence, a cryptomarket is similar
to Amazon, eBay and many other internet-based
commerce websites. For example, eBay is run by a
company in the United States, hosted at the domain
name www.ebay.com, and works with known vendors
and suppliers around the world to provide a large variety
of products for global consumers to purchase. What
makes eBay work is the software and financial
management processes behind the scenes, allowing
both consumers and vendors to purchase and sell goods
through their site. EBay receives a small percentage of
every sale resulting from a listing or advertisement on its
websites, as well as charging some other fees. The first
iteration of cryptomarkets are nothing more than similar
software and financial logistics hosted on an onion
domain using the bitcoin cryptocurrency. The largest
difference is that the customers and vendors are
knowingly participating in a global black market.
Cryptomarkets also differ in that they allow the purchase
and sale of both digital and non-digital goods to a global
customer base with the goal of providing private
transactions through the use of a hidden service and
digital currency. Deep Dot Web maintains a directory of
cryptomarkets(13).

I Architecture of a cryptomarket
The technology involved in running this type of
cryptomarket is pretty basic. Tors hidden services allow
anyone with a running Tor client to configure and host a
service on any device, from a laptop, desktop computer
or mobile phone to a large and powerful dedicated
computer, commonly called a server, located in a
dedicated, well-connected and reliable data centre. The
commoditisation of software and hardware lets anyone
build such a cryptomarket infrastructure for very little
money. It requires only hardware (such as a laptop), an
operating system, e-commerce software, integration
with a bitcoin payment processor, and installation and
configuration of Tor to provide a hidden service address
at the web server. If a market grows and the hardware
starts to fail, all the software and the hidden service can
be migrated to a dedicated hosting service(14).
(12) https://bitcoin.org/en/
(13) http://www.deepdotweb.com/marketplace-directory/listing/
(14) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedicated_hosting_service

36

The Invisible Internet Project (I2P)(15) is an alternative to


Tor hidden services. It is an overlay network based on
passing messages between routers using garlic routing
with a distributed hash table for a global directory of
available routers. All users of I2P are also running routers
to pass encrypted traffic between other routers. A few
cryptomarkets have recently started to use I2P as an
alternative to Tor hidden services (ONeill, 2013).
Websites hosted via I2P are referred to as eepsites.

I Organised crime and cryptomarkets


As cryptomarkets become easier to set up and use, its
natural for them to attract more customers and sellers of
a less technically inclined mindset. As sellers realise the
potential to generate profits with less risk of physical
violence and no need for face-to-face contact with their
buyers, more organised groups move in. Groups already
accustomed to trafficking illegal materials can adapt to
the internet and cryptomarkets very easily. Local street
dealers can attract more clients and increase their sales
to move up the hierarchy in criminal organisations. The
Dread Pirate Roberts of Silk Road allegedly interacted
with the Hells Angels organisation while running the site
(Paul, 2015). Through his trial, it came to light that a
Canadian chapter of the Hells Angels organisation was
the supplier to a seller on Silk Road. This provides a
concrete example of how organised crime can be
involved with cryptomarkets.
It is likely that the Canadian Hells Angels were part of a
larger transnational organised crime (TOC) network
(Albanese and Reichel, 2014). A TOC network may be
engaged in sourcing illegal narcotics, transporting them
across national borders and ultimately selling them to
local clients or expanding to international clients through
the internet and cryptomarkets. The surface web is still
far more commonly used to sell drugs than esoteric dark
web marketplaces (EMCDDA, 2015). However, the
increasing ease of use of cryptomarket websites and the
Tor Browser is attracting a larger user base for these
markets, in terms of both buyers and sellers. As an
example, a former IT professional became one of Silk
Roads largest heroin dealers within a year (ONeill, 2014).
TOC networks exist in several operational models, or
typologies, as defined by the United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime (UNODC) (2002). The five models are
rigid hierarchy, devolved hierarchy, hierarchical
conglomerate, core criminal group and organised
criminal network. The boxon p.37 defines each model in
(15) https://geti2p.net/en/

CHAPTER 3 ITor and links with cryptomarkets

United Nations Office on Drugs and


Crime transnational organised crime
typologies
Rigid hierarchy: single boss. Organisation or
division into several cells reporting to the centre.
Strong internal systems of discipline.
Devolved hierarchy: hierarchical structure and line
of command. However, regional structures, with
their own leadership hierarchy, have a degree of
autonomy over day-to-day functioning.
Hierarchical conglomerate: an association of
organised crime groups with a single governing
body. The latter can range from an organised
umbrella type body to more flexible and loose
oversight arrangements.
Core criminal group: ranging from relatively loose to
a cohesive group of core individuals who generally
regard themselves as working for the same
organisation. Horizontal rather than vertical
structure.
Organised criminal network: defined by the
activities of key individuals who engage in illicit
activity together in often shifting alliances. They do
not necessary regard themselves as an organised
criminal entity. Individuals are active in the network
through the skills and capital that they may bring.
Source: UNODC (2010).

more detail. In each organisational type, there is a


common series of seven steps (Lavorgna, 2014): (1)
preparatory activities, (2) cultivation/production, (3)
intermediate passage, (4) trafficking, (5) intermediate
passage, (6) distribution, and (7) consequential
activities.
The internet is currently involved in aspects of each step.
Cryptomarkets have generally only been involved in the
sixth step: distribution of the product(16). The individuals
involved in such cryptomarket operations have generally
been opportunistic entrepreneurs at the distribution
level of any of the TOC typologies. The technical
sophistication of cryptomarkets and the complexity of
setting up and running one, or a shop in one, has, to date,
limited the population of available candidates to those
with more advanced technology skills.

(16) Personal communications, (2014, 2015), Netherlands National Police,


Europol and Team Cymru staff.

I The next generation of cryptomarkets


The basic design for establishing a cryptomarket is still a
single computer somewhere on the internet. This model
cannot sustain much more than a small business. It also
opens up the single machine to a variety of investigative
and technical approaches to de-anonymising the traffic
and the patrons, and exposing the entire operation. As a
result of this reality and the success of the bitcoin block
chain, a new generation of cryptomarkets are beginning
to appear. The leading candidate for identification as
such a next-generation cryptomarket is OpenBazaar(17 ).
OpenBazaar works by distributing the transactions of
the e-commerce software among all participants of the
market. The market itself is based not on a single
instance of e-commerce software running on a single
server somewhere on the internet, but rather on the
software running on all the computers participating in
the market. This is accomplished using the basics of the
bitcoin block chain. The bitcoin block chain is a
distributed audit log of all transactions(18). OpenBazaar
applies this block chain logic to all transactions in the
marketplace. Therefore, when someone runs the
OpenBazaar software on their computer, it immediately
becomes part of the marketplace itself. This creates the
potential for a fully distributed marketplace spread
across millions of computers around the globe. Each
computer handles only a part of the marketplace, rather
than everything being handled on one single computer.
Tor hidden services or I2P eepsites could be used with
this model to further protect the identity and privacy of
users involved in the marketplace.

Positive consequences of
cryptomarkets

The coverage of Silk Road in the mainstream media and


the moderated and open format of the forums attracted
people from all walks of life. Silk Road was the most
popular cryptomarket to offer discussion forums. There
were forums dedicated to testing the purity of the
product, to safe shipping methods, to safe bitcoin
practices and, most interestingly, to harm reduction
strategies and ending addiction to illicit drugs. Its easy to
understand why someone involved in an illegal trade
might want to share best practices and tips on many
topics. However, what wasnt expected was that users
would use the forums to discuss ending their
dependencies on illicit drugs or reducing the harm caused

(17 ) https://openbazaar.org/
(18) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitcoin#The_block_chain

37

The internet and drug markets

to themselves and others by their use of them. Dr


Fernando Caudevilla, aka DoctorX, was the first to realise
the potential of the privacy and anonymity these hidden
services and cryptomarkets can provide (Cox, 2014).

Law enforcement approaches to


cryptomarkets

As criminals and criminal activity move to cryptomarkets,


so do the law enforcement agencies. Law enforcement
agencies have the added challenge of learning about the
entire range of technologies that may be used by a
criminal. Criminals have the advantage of having to learn
only one technology at a time, and use it well, to be
successful in both profit generation and avoiding legal
consequences. Law enforcement agencies also have to
consider a diversity of products, some digital and some
physical. Laws on digital products are, by the nature of
these products, more difficult to enforce. They can be
easily copied, distributed, bought and sold, both online
and offline. Physical products are easier to investigate
and control, as they have to be delivered somewhere and
to someone.
Essers (2014) provides an example: the National Police
of the Netherlands (Politie) ran a sting operation where
they posed as buyers in a cryptomarket. They targeted
vendors selling to restricted markets, such as within the
Netherlands or to Dutch speakers only. They purchased
the drugs from the cryptomarket and arranged a
rendezvous with the seller or the sellers delivery person.
The Politie then arrested the person who arrived at the
rendezvous point and subsequently used this person as
an informant. The Politie further infiltrated the sellers
and the cryptomarket until they were able to take down
the cryptomarket itself (Essers, 2014).
Another approach to locating and taking down
cryptomarkets is attacking the software itself. There are
many layers of software involved in the operation: the
operating system, the web server software, the Tor
software and the e-commerce software. Any one of
these parts of the cryptomarket can have vulnerabilities
that may be exploited. In the case of a cryptomarket
selling child pornography, the Politie was reportedly able
to execute a warrant by breaking the software behind the
cryptomarket (Dingledine, 2011). It has been suggested
that Europol was able to break into Tor, watching the
distributed hash table of hidden services in order to take
down 414 hidden service addresses pointing to 28
individual cryptomarkets (Deutsch and Raymond, 2014).

38

The operational security of the criminals is another area


for law enforcement agencies to target, as was the case
with the takedowns of Silk Road (Greenberg, 2013) and
Silk Road2.0 (Rushe, 2014). In both cases, law
enforcement agencies were able to follow financial trails
to put together a list of suspects. The suspects were
then easily placed under surveillance and further
information leaks and patterns were discovered as a
result of weak operational security practices. These
information leaks were then used to further target the
suspects, and eventually enough data were gathered for
a conviction (Mullin, 2015a, 2015b).

I The future of cryptomarkets


The first iteration of cryptomarkets still has a long life
ahead of it. At the time of writing, there are a number of
cryptomarkets still running after years of operations
against them. They prove that strict operational security
and operational focus can enable markets to continue
despite many law enforcement investigations. The
current weakness in all of these markets is the singleserver model. Whether running Tor or I2P, essentially
there is marketplace/e-commerce software located on a
single computer in an encrypted address space. Having
a single computer running the marketplace software
opens the market up to computer attacks, which can
start to place the server within various network
locations. A fully distributed cryptomarket increases the
difficulty and economic costs of removing such markets
from the internet. This is expensive from a law
enforcement perspective, but possibly desirable from a
user perspective.
The next generation of cryptomarkets provides a glimpse
into the future. The actual exchange of currency,
especially from virtual (such as bitcoin) to fiat (such as
euros), will always be a vulnerable boundary. This
boundary, virtual world to real world, can be used by law
enforcement to watch for transactions that may be
traceable from the marketplace through to conversion to
fiat currency. This boundary can also be a point of
security for users looking to participate in forums or
transactions not tied to their real-world identity.
As both citizens and law enforcement learn about,
exploit and use cryptomarkets, they may usher in a new
age of e-commerce. As with any new technology,
criminals and opportunistic businesses will be early
adopters of cryptomarket technology. These early
adopters, and their customers, will work out the issues in
the systems while simultaneously helping to improve the
systems for future users.

CHAPTER 3 ITor and links with cryptomarkets

I References
I

 lbanese, J. and Reichel, P. (2014), Transnational organized


A
crime: an overview from six continents, Sage Publications,
Thousand Oaks, CA.

 iryukov, A., Pustogarov, I. and Weinmann, R. (2013), Trawling


B
for Tor hidden services: detection, measurement,
deanonymization, Proceedings of the 2013 IEEE Symposium
on Security and Privacy. Available at: http://www.ieeesecurity.org/TC/SP2013/papers/4977a080.pdf

 ox, J. (2014), Buying your drugs online is good for you, Vice,
C
24/1/2014, http://www.vice.com/read/silk-road-is-good-foryou

 ingledine, R. (2011), Dutch police break into webservers


D
over hidden services, Tor-talk mailing list, https://lists.
torproject.org/pipermail/tor-talk/2011-September/021198.
html

 eutsch, A. and Raymond, N. (2014), Europol seizes 400


D
dark market sites in coordinated raid, Reuters, 7/11/2014,
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/07/us-europolcybersecurity-arrests-idUSKBN0IR0Z120141107
EMCDDA (2015), The Internet and drug markets: summary of
results from an EMCDDA Trendspotter study, European
Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, Lisbon.
Available at: http://www.emcdda.europa.eu/attachements.
cfm/att_234684_EN_Internet%20and%20drug%20
markets%20study.pdf
 ssers, L. (2014), Dutch police seize hidden online
E
marketplace Utopia, PC World, 11/2/2014, http://www.
pcworld.com/article/2096740/dutch-police-seize-hiddenonline-marketplace-utopia.html
 reenberg, A. (2013), End of the Silk Road: FBI says its
G
busted the webs biggest anonymous drug black market,
Forbes, 2/10/2013, http://www.forbes.com/sites/
andygreenberg/2013/10/02/end-of-the-silk-road-fbi-buststhe-webs-biggest-anonymous-drug-black-market/

 avorgna, A. (2014), Internet-mediated drug trafficking:


L
towards a better understanding of new criminal dynamics,
Trends in Organized Crime, 17(4). Available at: http://link.
springer.com/article/10.1007/s12117-014-9226-8

 ewman, A. (2015), The Tor Project, retrieved from


L
https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/tree/rend-spect.txt

 ullin, J. (2015a), At Silk Road trial, federal agent explains


M
how he trapped Ulbricht, Ars Technica, 14/1/2015,
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/01/silk-road-trialfederal-agent-explains-how-he-trapped-ulbricht/

 ullin, J. (2015b), Ulbricht guilty in Silk Road online drugM


trafficking trial, Ars Technica, 4/2/2015, http://arstechnica.
com/tech-policy/2015/02/ulbricht-guilty-in-silk-road-onlinedrug-trafficking-trial/

 urdoch, S. (2006), Hot or not: revealing hidden services by


M
their clock skew, Proceedings of ACM CCS 2006, Alexandria,
Virginia. Available at: http://freehaven.net/anonbib/cache/
HotOrNot.pdf

 Neill, P. (2013), As Silk Road 2.0 struggles, new black


O
markets look beyond Tor, The Daily Dot, 26/12/2013,
http://www.dailydot.com/crime/deep-web-black-marketsbeyond-tor-i2p/

 Neill, P. (2014), The final confessions of a Silk Road kingpin,


O
The Daily Dot, 22/1/2014, http://www.dailydot.com/crime/
silk-road-confession-steven-sadler-nod/

 verlier, L. and Syverson, P. (2006a), Locating hidden

services, Proceedings of the 2006 IEEE Symposium on


Security and Privacy. Available at: http://www.onion-router.
net/Publications/locating-hidden-servers.pdf

 verlier, L. and Syverson, P. (2006b), Valet services:

improving hidden servers with a personal touch, Proceedings


of the Sixth Workshop on Privacy Enhancing Technologies,
Cambridge, pp. 223244. Available at: http://www.onionrouter.net/Publications/valet-services.pdf

 aul, K. (2015), The Silk Road boss allegedly encouraged the


P
Hells Angels to kill a blackmailer, Motherboard, 29/1/2015,
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-silk-road-bossallegedly-encouraged-the-hells-angels-to-kill-a-blackmailer

 ushe, D. (2014), Silk Road 2.0s alleged owner arrested as


R
drugs website shuttered by FBI, The Guardian, 6/11/2014,
http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/nov/06/
silk-road-20-owner-arrested-drugs-website-fbi

UNODC (2010), The globalization of crime: a transnational


organized crime threat assessment, UNODC, Vienna. Available
at: https://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-and-analysis/
tocta-2010.html

UNODC, (2002), Results of a pilot study of forty selected


organized criminal groups in sixteen countries, UNODC,
Vienna. Available at: http://www.unodc.org/pdf/crime/
publications/Pilot_survey.pdf

39

CHAPTER 4

Staying in the shadows: the use of


bitcoin and encryption in
cryptomarkets
Joseph Cox

I Introduction
There are two essential technologies that have given
birth to cryptomarkets. The first is anonymity networks,
which allow users to browse the web without revealing
their location, and which also disguise where a sites
servers are located. This allows cryptomarkets to sell
illegal products in an open fashion while remaining
relatively safe from law enforcement. Most commonly,
cryptomarkets use Tors hidden service model, as
explained in the previous chapter, although there are
markets on other networks, such as the Invisible Internet
Project (I2P). The second technology deals with the
financial side, and ensures that online transactions can
be carried out with a substantial level of anonymity.
Bitcoin, and other currencies that have been inspired by
it, are used to purchase items rather than using a PayPal
account or credit card, both of which can be easily linked
to a users identity.

I Bitcoin
I The problem for digital currencies
When someone sends a digital item across the internet,
they havent lost the original: when a user sends an email
attachment, the file is still on their computer; when they
upload a picture to Facebook, the photo doesnt
disappear from their hard drive, and its still there for
them to view, delete or share over and over again. This is
a problem for digital currency. When Alice sends Bob a
digital coin, how can anyone be sure that Alice didnt
simply send a copy? Usually, with financial transactions,
a bank or other body makes sure that this doesnt
happen, by keeping a record of their transactions, but
this isnt the case for files sent between computers. This
is commonly known as the double-spending problem
(Bonadonna, 2013).

Other technologies have been adopted by the users,


vendors and administrators of cryptomarkets, but they
arent strictly necessary for a site to function. These
include message encryption, which hides the contents
of a message so that only the intended recipient can
read it, and hard-drive encryption, which protects the
files on a users computer from access by an
unauthorised party.

Bitcoins answer comes in the form of the block chain: a


public ledger that records all successful transactions
made with the currency, meaning that no one can spend
their coins twice. Its similar to a bank statement, except
it keeps track of the whole currency, rather than just an
individuals account. With the block chain, it is easy to
see which addresses, analogous to a bank account, hold
what amount of bitcoins.

This chapter explains the fundamentals of bitcoin, the


commonly used forms of encryption and how they are
used within cryptomarkets.

A block is a series of updates of the transfers between


addresses, and can be thought of as a fresh page in the
ledger. As well as these transactions, a block also
includes information that refers directly to the block that
preceded it. This ongoing connection, from each block to
the next, is why the collection of blocks is called the
block chain.

41

The internet and drug markets

I Mining bitcoins
Each block also contains a very difficult mathematical
problem that needs to be solved before the block can
permanently join the block chain. There are multiple
solutions to any of the blocks mathematical problems,
but only one needs to be discovered, although these
problems intentionally become more difficult over time
and require more computing power to solve. The
computer that finds the solution for a block first is given
additional bitcoins as a reward for helping to maintain
the block chain. This process is known as mining.
Importantly, this updating of the ledger is not controlled
by a third party, be that a bank, a formal financial
institution or a government, who might, for whatever
reason, tamper with it or let records go astray. Instead,
the bitcoin network regulates itself.

I Using bitcoins on cryptomarkets


If a user wishes to start storing bitcoins, they will first
need a bitcoin wallet. One of these can either be
downloaded locally onto the users computer or
smartphone, or be hosted by an online service. The
former is a piece of software, opened like any other
computer programme. The latter functions in very much
the same style as internet banking: a user logs in via
their internet browser, and can view their balance and
send bitcoins to other people. Included with the wallet
will be a users bitcoin address. This string of 2536
characters is what somebody else needs to send
bitcoins to the user, for example:
3J98t1WpEZ73CNmQviecrnyiWrnqRhWNLy.
Cryptomarket user accounts usually include a bitcoin
wallet address too, and it is possible to send purchased
coins to it straight away. However, since cryptomarkets
are under constant threat of being shut down by law
enforcement and having all of their coins seized, users
tend to avoid storing a significant number of bitcoins in a
market address.
When trading on a cryptomarket, a buyer and a seller will
both use addresses that are built into the market. This is
to take advantage of any escrow system that the market
might use. Escrow gives the buyer financial security
when purchasing an item on the cryptomarket. In a basic
system, a buyer will order an item, and the fee will be
provided to the seller only once the buyer has confirmed
that they have received their order. More advanced
escrow systems, such as that on the now-defunct
market Evolution, use multi-signature transactions. This
means that, instead of just the buyer confirming their
successful order and releasing the funds, two out of the

42

three parties involved the buyer, the seller and the


market need to sign off the transaction.

I Buying bitcoins
The vast majority of those using bitcoin to buy products
on cryptomarkets will not have mined the bitcoins
themselves. Instead, they are likely to have purchased
them with fiat currency. One option for this is buying the
coins in person or through cash deposits. Although this
may take slightly longer than other methods, buying
coins in this way allows for a high degree of anonymity. A
user will find a suitable bitcoin trader on a site such as
localbitcoins.com, be given the vendors bank details and
then make a cash deposit at a local bank branch. This
can usually be done without the buyer presenting any
form of identification. So when the purchased bitcoins
arrive in their wallet, and as long as the wallet itself does
not give away their name or personal information, the
buyer will have bitcoins that are in no way linked to their
identity, and they can therefore spend their bitcoins
anonymously.
However, many users buy their bitcoins via means that
link their bitcoin wallet to their real-world identity. For
example, many of the most popular websites for buying
bitcoins require a form of identification, such as a
passport or drivers licence, to be presented. Even if the
exchange doesnt require identification, the coins may
still be bought with a credit or debit card, which is in turn
linked to a users personal information. Once the link has
been made, a persistent and resourceful observer can
trace bitcoin transactions back to a wallet, a pseudonym
and possibly a users real identity.

I Reasons for bitcoin anonymity


There are a number of reasons why someone might want
to buy their bitcoins anonymously and not have their
identity linked to any transactions. The most obvious
reason when it comes to cryptomarkets is because many
of the items available are illegal to possess. A user may
be worried that their purchase of drugs or weapons, for
example, may be traced back to them, and that they
could face criminal charges.
Theoretically, a law enforcement agent could track a
buyers transactions back to the point when the bitcoins
were purchased online, a practice known as block chain
analysis (Simonite, 2013). Thus, the buyers identity has
been revealed, or the law enforcement agency at least
has enough information to issue the bitcoin exchange
with a subpoena, forcing them to hand over the identity

CHAPTER 4 IStaying in the shadows: the use of bitcoin and encryption in cryptomarkets

of their customer. By way of illustration, Forbes magazine


asked Sarah Meiklejohn, a computer science researcher
at the University of California, San Diego, to attempt to
map what transactions Forbes had made, with
knowledge only of its bitcoin address. Meiklejohn
managed to identify every transaction we had made,
including deposits to Silk Road, [and] to competitor sites
Atlantis and Black Market Reloaded (Greenberg, 2013).
In fact, anybody with an internet connection can
examine the block chain: it is available through a number
of web services.
Another reason for wanting to use bitcoin anonymously
is less obvious. Once a bitcoin wallet has been linked to
a real-world identity, and personal details such as name,
email address and other information have been
discovered, it is possible for a hacker to attempt to steal
the users coins. Armed with that kind of information, an
attacker can write a phishing email. These are emails
that coerce the user into replying with sensitive
information, such as their banking details, or trick the
user into entering their login details or password into a
spoofed web page (Cluley, 2014).

I Unlinking bitcoins
To conceal their identity, to avoid either prosecution or
hacking attacks, a bitcoin user may wish to separate any
transactions from their identity. Some cryptomarkets
have obfuscation systems built into their infrastructure.
For example, the original Silk Road would disguise the
path of its users coins to make it difficult to identify by
whom each transaction was made. Silk Road also used
a so-called tumbler which, as the site explained, sen[t]
all payments through a complex, semi-random series of
dummy transactionsmaking it nearly impossible to
link your payment with any coins leaving the site,
according to an FBI press release posted after the sites
closure (New York Field Office, 2013). However, users
may wish to unlink their identity from any transactions
they make themselves, either because the cryptomarket
they are using doesnt provide such a service or to build
in an added layer of security.
One popular site for doing this is Bitcoin Fog, which
obfuscates the destination of a users coins to the point
where block chain analysis becomes exceptionally
difficult. Users sign up for a free account on Bitcoin Fog,
accessible only via Tor, and then deposit an amount of
bitcoins at an address randomly generated by the
service. Since it is just a bitcoin address like any other,
there is no way to even see that you have deposited
money to Bitcoin Fog, and not to a random account you
have generated yourself, according to the Bitcoin Fog

support site(1). From here, a user can schedule a series


of withdrawals, all of which will have variables of them
randomised: the size of each payout, the time at which
they occur and also the destination address, of which
there can be several. This way there is no practically
reliable way to do statistical analysis on the block chain
and link your deposits to your withdrawals, states the
support site.
Bitcoin Fog does require the user to be thoughtful: the
amount withdrawn should be different from that
originally deposited. The reason for this is given by an
example on the support site: If you transfer 1.382 to us,
and the next day you withdraw ~1.38bitcoins to another
account, those amounts will be visible in the block chain,
and unless there were 10 other people that day that also
withdrew just 1.38bitcoins, the link between your
deposit and your withdrawal will be obvious.
Another method for obfuscating bitcoin transactions is
the use of CoinJoin. For instance, Alice wants to transfer
1bitcoin from addressA to addressB, and Bob wants to
transfer 1bitcoin from addressC to addressD(2). In
essence, CoinJoin allows Alice and Bob to combine their
trades into a single transaction, with two inputs (A and
C) and two outputs (B and D). Anyone observing the
block chain will not be able to determine which of the
outputs is Alices and which is Bobs. This can be done
with more than two people, and although it doesnt
disguise that a transaction took place (as all transactions
are recorded in the block chain), it does obscure who is
behind each transaction. In addition, because a users
coins arent being stored by a third party, as in the case
of Bitcoin Fog, there isnt the possibility of a user having
their coins stolen by the service. The CoinJoin method
has been adopted by popular bitcoin wallet services,
including Blockchain.info, which has incorporated it into
its online wallet service, under the name SharedCoin(3).
A third method for ensuring bitcoin privacy is the use of a
dedicated wallet that incorporates many different
technologies together. One of those is DarkWallet, a
project led by the computer programmer Amir Taaki.
DarkWallet can be used without providing any identifying
information, and it includes the technology behind
CoinJoin. It also uses stealth addresses, which are
generated on demand by the user, without anyone
watching the block chain knowing the receiver is the
owner of the original stealth address, according to the
DarkWallet Wiki (4). DarkWallet is currently available as a

(1) The support site can be found at http://www.bitcoinfog.com/


(2) This example was taken from a post on Stack Exchange (Rami, 2013).
(3) The companys explanation of this service can be found at
https://sharedcoin.com/
(4) https://wiki.unsystem.net/en/index.php/DarkWallet/Alpha#Stealth

43

The internet and drug markets

browser plugin for Chrome; it will also be released for


use with Firefox.
Recently, DarkWallet released a feature allowing its
users to anonymously convert and withdraw funds from
their wallet through an ATM. At the moment, this feature
extends across thousands of ATMs in Europe, and
requires a user to enter a code sent to their mobile
phone, rather than using a bank card (Rogers, 2015).
DarkWallet also hosts an independent bitcoin exchange,
where users can purchase bitcoins anonymously.
The research community investigating bitcoin anonymity
is a vibrant one, and the subject is likely to become more
relevant as it becomes harder to purchase bitcoins
anonymously in the first place. For example,
localbitcoins.com, the previously mentioned platform
used to meet bitcoin merchants in person or obtain their
bank deposit details, had to cease operations in
Germany after being approached by the countrys
Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (Rizzo, 2014).

I Anonymity-focused cryptocurrencies
Some programmers and bitcoin enthusiasts have
developed other cryptocurrencies. The method of
acquiring these coins is essentially the same as bitcoin
computers solve increasingly complex equations with
their processing power and the way they are spent is
indistinguishable from bitcoin. But many of these newer
coins have different features. Naturally, those of most
interest to cryptomarkets are the coins that push for
greater anonymity: those that mitigate the problems of
bitcoin trading being linked to a real-world identity, and
which bypass the need to be cleaned using another
service. Very few of these cryptocurrencies have gained
any sort of wider use, and even those that have been
given more attention make up a tiny part of the overall
trade of cryptocurrencies. Nevertheless, use of
anonymity-focused cryptocurrencies is an important
development, because it indicates that people are keen
to make the trade in illegal substances and other items
even more secure. Furthermore, the purpose of these
privacy-focused coins isnt necessarily to gain value
when traded for a fiat currency, but to allow more
anonymous trade.
One of those cryptocurrencies is the aptly named Dark
Coin. Described by Wired as Bitcoins stealthier cousin,
Dark Coin became an acceptable form of payment on
the Nucleus and Diabolus markets in November 2014
(Greenberg, 2014). It is also used for buying web hosting
and virtual private network services. Dark Coins appeal
is that it incorporates technologies that obfuscate who is

44

sending coins to whom. So rather than having to buy an


amount of currency and then process the coins through
a separate service, the currency itself has these
anonymity features built in.
Other privacy-focused cryptocurrencies do exist, but
their uptake has been limited, even by the
cryptomarkets. At the moment, it is likely that bitcoin will
remain the primary cryptocurrency used by the markets.

I Encryption
Due to the illicit nature of the business conducted on
cryptomarkets, or just to ensure their own privacy, many
users decide to encrypt their communications. This
behaviour isnt required for the use of cryptomarkets, but
is generally recommended by staff, with sections of
forums dedicated to teaching new users how to use
encryption. The most common message encryption
programme is PGP, used by cryptomarket
administration, vendors and buyers. PGP stands for
Pretty Good Privacy. Created in 1991 by Phil
Zimmermann, it is a computer programme that allows a
user to encrypt text and files so that only the intended
recipient is able to decrypt it. PGP also allows a user to
digitally sign messages, in order for the interlocutor to
feel reasonably confident that the messages are coming
from who they say they are. In his essay, Why I Wrote
PGP, Zimmermann summed up the various possible
uses of the programme (Zimmermann, 1999):
Its personal. Its private. And its no ones business but
yours. You may be planning a political campaign,
discussing your taxes, or having a secret romance. Or
you may be communicating with a political dissident in
a repressive country. Whatever it is, you dont want your
private electronic mail (email) or confidential
documents read by anyone else. Theres nothing wrong
with asserting your privacy. Privacy is as apple-pie as
the Constitution.

Zimmermann distributed this software as shareware,


meaning that it could be spread freely as long as it
wasnt used for commercial purposes (Spectacle, 1995).
However, when PGP ended up in the hands of non-US
citizens, Zimmerman faced a government investigation
for exporting munitions without a licence, because, at
the time, cryptography of a certain strength was
considered a weapon (Zimmermann, 1995). This
investigation was eventually dropped with no charges
being brought, but it spurred Zimmerman to release the
source code for PGP in the novel form of a book
published by The MIT Press, as it would be politically

CHAPTER 4 IStaying in the shadows: the use of bitcoin and encryption in cryptomarkets

difficult for the Government to prohibit the export of a


book that anyone may find in a public library or a
bookstore, Zimmermann wrote in its preface.
Since its launch, PGP has seen many updates and
improvements to ease of use, and the company PGP
Incorporated was formed and subsequently acquired by
a number of different corporations. The software PGP is
now maintained by Symantec, but many alternatives of
the software have sprung up, with one of the most
popular being GnuPG (GPG). However, when talking
about message encryption generally, the acronyms GPG
and PGP are typically used interchangeably, as the two
pieces of software serve essentially the same purpose.
Today, PGP is still considered the standard for message
encryption; Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor
who blew the whistle on the agencys mass surveillance
programmes, used it to communicate with journalists
(Lee, 2014).

I How PGP works


PGP works through the use of pairs of keys, with each
pair of keys comprising a public key and a private or
secret key. These keys are simply files stored on a users
computer or USB stick. The public key, as the name
suggests, is one that should be used in the public
domain for others to see. This may be on a users
personal website, in his or her forum profile or on a site
or server that hosts the public keys of other people. It is
what people use to encrypt a message to a user. The
private key is one that, ideally, should never be shared
with anyone else. This key is used to decrypt any
messages or files encrypted for a user, as well as signing
any messages the user sends, to assure the recipient
that they are indeed communicating with the correct
person. If a third party is in possession of a users secret
key, they may be able to read encrypted messages sent
to the user, or the third party could impersonate the user
and sign messages with their key. It is worth mentioning
that some users do share their secret keys. For example,
the secret key of Heroin Vendor may be accessible by
more than one person, if Heroin Vendor is actually a
team of people working to sell product on a
cryptomarket. However, in the majority of cases each
individual using a cryptomarket is likely to have their own
secret key.

user will typically interact with, with simple buttons for


Encrypt, Save and other common functions. For
example, a commonly used version for Windows
machines is GPG4Win, which uses GPG as its basis.
Below is a message before it has been encrypted with
the PGP protocol.
Hello,
This is a message that I would like to have encrypted.
Thanks,
A user

The user will then select which public keys they wish to
encrypt the message for. After being encrypted, the
result is either a new file or a body of text, depending on
the programme. Either way, its contents will be
unintelligible: a mixture of seemingly random digits,
symbols, and upper- and lower-case letters. Below is the
earlier message after being encrypted.
----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE----hQIMA3mulckJMVeCARAAoliWbrv6tYyXcA2tMs16Avp
Ng37bt/eLsX3EdYS5YWMCl3Cictc8y93lMhOJNWRDL
mt1Zrj9kDcEThysCFePrRLUzxQQdFqsWh29VTa7vfKT
pYCSXhsgUft0bPu62ISl+sYR51CWaE/bAtSwF7fqtKI4
AYUG3jeedHF8QScTtcCM15eNmp7TWZvURZT3kq6rW
AVoSt938XN3JZhHd2SvX1qhOwqjoHGaQE+Kl2ejaZ8jr
u7Javwq3ix3/NF+b7EXBdM7eBbI0Z1/sLEcgkyp1vEO8
RJ8HtXEf1g/TE+u+JHl1IfcUxxafPZFNKp8AJhAvEe/r/
x5qABKEPBYxDOxBT84i+aWgGSN5X1nx0Z2j8VyqWh
xdmkugok/XNL0KbuH2sHlBAWsAByNTfbzm612WihhN
akEbyP5V719VvFBRIvr1bOP4RTj35xCi/V838V8cUku0
+U1YuWd+24avMHivRlLodZqLhe5K9C/JyP22E/m4Ww
sa0ZPemm4g7vCKQWUDWRaa/OaBu4N1q37hVp83dj
ED5dqSDmt15DU/eC65a7Mb3aKxajqQqwk7ivq0cBme
YfbWlekREZU2QTe6Vq6P5Tz94MfwJGNxOiDooEMGv
82AqPBjyYArF50znAcqU9raqUMpH4EY1x+mUlJWir+a
6adimIEg1wXhje5LG0lc63SqwFxoXD8m+Swdo2jbGLll
HaSnNJH0VQE15KS5JkbHm9M3qtd27vGxqKGlnnrWf
eeuc2ljsqmdtjwatCL7CQNRqSOC+g8OPowfd6unDF3
mIMOW9CjIGik89FTJPeyy6XCPd7vBezAstsdplQ43W
THucHtIy4ezScEy36hqKtSe28P40ZBVplw6MXH65ZG
hLKiffc4MlJTS3qXVrGZL4THn5dRF1osIjGMoELIA==
=iJXY

PGP is the protocol used to encrypt messages, but the


actual process of applying these protocols to messages
is done either by the user via the command line of their
computer a process that requires some technical
knowledge or by another programme that makes the
process easier for the user. This programme is what the

----END PGP MESSAGE-----

This message can then be pasted into the body of an


email or sent using the messaging service of a
cryptomarket. This way, even if the message is

45

The internet and drug markets

intercepted through a governments mass surveillance


system, is inspected by those providing the messaging
service (either the email company, such as Google, or
the administrators of the cryptomarket) or is viewed by
law enforcement agents who have acquired copies of a
cryptomarkets private messages, the actual content of
the message will be unreadable to those without the
correct key. To decrypt a message sent via a
cryptomarkets messaging system, the user will need to
paste it into their PGP programme. After this, they are
prompted to type in a password, and then they can read
the original message.
It is important to note that the use of PGP does not
encrypt a users metadata. Metadata comprise all of the
information related to a communication that isnt the
content of the communication itself. Metadata include,
for example, the date an email was sent; which address
it was sent from; the recipients email address; and the
services that the email travelled through to its
destination. In practical terms, this means that, if an
administrator of a cryptomarket was snooping on who
was talking to whom via the sites messaging system,
they would still be able to see a buyer talking to a vendor,
although they wouldnt be able to read the content of the
message if the users had been using PGP.
As mentioned, PGP is important for all types of users of
cryptomarkets, but it is especially useful for buyers
sending a vendor their name and delivery address. This
way, even if law enforcement manages to seize a
cryptomarkets servers and, in turn, all private messages
written through the site, they will not be able to see the
real names of any customers who have encrypted their
details.

I Other forms of encryption


PGP is certainly the most widely used form of message
encryption on cryptomarkets, but a couple of others are
used as well. Off-the-Record (OTR) is a method for
encrypting instant messaging services, such as Google
Talk, Facebook or Jabber. The software typically comes
as a plugin that is installed alongside another chat
programme. This method of communication doesnt use
the messaging system of a cryptomarket, but vendors
may advertise their OTR contact details on a site. For
example, on one site, Map Dealers legalize world, many
vendors advertise OTR chat in their contact details (Cox,
2014).
As well as encrypting their communications, some users
take the step of making access to the files on their
computer more difficult. Hard-drive encryption prevents

46

someone with physical access to a computer, such as a


law enforcement officer once an arrest has been made,
accessing certain files or the entire contents of the
computer. In order to decrypt the hard drive, a password
needs to be entered, and some encryption software
allows users to set up two different passwords: one to be
entered if they are under duress, which reveals one set
of files, and another, genuine, password that protects the
sensitive information in another set of files.

I Conclusion
Cryptomarkets use several different pieces of
technology: as well as Tor, covered in the previous
chapter, they also use bitcoin for fairly anonymous
financial transactions; message encryption for
communicating securely; and other forms of security for
keeping sensitive information hidden. As law
enforcement agencies continue to crack down on these
markets, it seems that advances in these technologies
are likely to be adopted by cryptomarkets and their
users.

I References
I

 onadonna, E. (2013), Bitcoin and the double-spending


B
problem, http://blogs.cornell.edu/info4220/2013/03/29/
bitcoin-and-the-double-spending-problem/

 hen, A. (2013), Redditor claims to have been arrested for


C
buying drugs on Silk Road, http://gawker.com/redditorclaims-to-have-been-arrested-for-buying-drugs-1444086695

 luley, G. (2014), Bitcoin phishing attack targets Blockchain


C
users, http://grahamcluley.com/2014/03/bitcoin-phishing/

 ox, J. (2014), This deep web site maps the worlds drug
C
dealers, http://motherboard.vice.com/read/this-deep-website-maps-the-worlds-drug-dealers

 reenberg, A. (2013), Follow the bitcoins: how we got busted


G
buying drugs on Silk Roads black market, http://www.forbes.
com/sites/andygreenberg/2013/09/05/follow-the-bitcoinshow-we-got-busted-buying-drugs-on-silk-roads-black-market/

 reenberg, A. (2014), Online drug dealers are now accepting


G
darkcoin, bitcoins stealthier cousin, http://www.wired.
com/2014/11/darkcoin-and-online-drug-dealers/

 ee, M. (2014), Ed Snowden taught me to smuggle secrets


L
past incredible danger. Now I teach you, https://firstlook.org/
theintercept/2014/10/28/smuggling-snowden-secrets/

 ew York Field Office (2013), Manhattan U.S. Attorney


N
announces seizure of additional $28 million worth of bitcoins
belonging to Ross William Ulbricht, alleged owner and
operator of Silk Road website, https://www.fbi.gov/

CHAPTER 4 IStaying in the shadows: the use of bitcoin and encryption in cryptomarkets

newyork/press-releases/2013/manhattan-u.s.-attorneyannounces-seizure-of-additional-28-million-worth-of-bitcoinsbelonging-to-ross-william-ulbricht-alleged-owner-andoperator-of-silk-road-website

 imonite, T. (2013), Mapping the bitcoin economy could


S
reveal users identities, http://www.technologyreview.com/
news/518816/mapping-the-bitcoin-economy-could-revealusers-identities/

 ami (2013), Can someone explain to me how coinjoin works


R
for anonymity in plain English without all the tech jargon?,
https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/16649/
can-someone-explain-to-me-how-coinjoin-works-foranonymity-in-plain-english-with

 pectacle (1995), The Zimmermann case, http://www.


S
spectacle.org/795/zimm.html

 immermann, P. (1995), Authors preface to the book: PGP


Z
Source Code and Internals, https://www.philzimmermann.
com/EN/essays/BookPreface.html

 izzo, P. (2014), LocalBitcoins exploring options after


R
service halt in Germany, http://www.coindesk.com/
localbitcoins-exploring-options-service-halt-germany/

 immermann, P. (1999), Why I wrote PGP, https://www.


Z
philzimmermann.com/EN/essays/WhyIWrotePGP.html

 ogers, K. (2015), Dark wallet, now with cash, http://


R
motherboard.vice.com/read/dark-wallet-now-with-cash

47

CHAPTER 5

Reputation is everything: the role of


ratings, feedback and reviews in
cryptomarkets
Joseph Cox

I Introduction
Cryptomarkets rely heavily on trust. Because a drug
vendor in any cryptomarket transaction is
pseudonymous, and does not have to deal with the
buyer in any sort of close proximity, it is theoretically
easy for them to deliver a product that is of a lesser
quality than advertised or not to deliver the item at all
and not be held to account.
Within cryptomarkets, this problem has been mitigated by
the use of various reputation systems, such as ratings,
feedback and reviews of products and vendors, which are
posted on the cryptomarkets themselves, in their forums
or on social media. These reputation systems provide
buyers with a fairly reliable account of a vendors previous
transactions and track record, as well as of the quality of
individual products, and can help them to build up an
overall picture of whether a drug vendor is trustworthy or
not. These systems ensure that dealers who do provide a
low-quality service are shunned by the cryptomarket
community. In turn, this insight allows buyers to make
informed decisions on what to purchase and from whom,
and to avoid more dangerous batches of drugs, so that
these reputation systems potentially offer, in this respect,
certain harm reduction benefits.

on eBay, Amazon and Yelp. Indeed, cryptomarkets in


general are often described as being similar to these
sites, which also allow users to rate products and
services (Harris, 2013; Kopstein, 2013).
Along with the numbered rating, customers are also
encouraged to leave a short piece of feedback about
their particular order. These snippets of feedback focus
on a variety of different aspects of the customers drug
purchase. Some talk about the quality of the product:
half gram weight out to 0.3, gear was decent, expected
better, was one piece of feedback left on a listing for
Afghan heroin on Silk Road2.0.
Other users report on the packaging used and how
effectively shipped the item was. Very safe and original
packaging! one piece of feedback left on an MDMA listing
on the AlphaBay market reads. stealth was good it almost
fooled me, was another left on the same listing, with
stealth here referring to how likely a drug is to remain
undetected owing to the way it has been packaged.
Others focus on the speed of delivery. I ordered 11:30
AM yesterday and my package was in my mail box in
literally 25 hours. Quality is up there with the best tar Ive
ever had. Ill definitely be back for more in the future,
was one comment left on Silk Road2.0.

This chapter describes the main features of reputation


systems and their role in cryptomarkets.

I Ratings and feedback

FIGURE 5.1
A screenshot of feedback list on a listing for MDMA on
the cryptomarket AlphaBay

One type of reputation system is the use of ratings for


individual products. After a buyer has ordered and paid
for an item, they are prompted to leave a rating. These
ratings are typically a number between one and five, in
the same style as traditional five star ratings. Naturally,
these ratings have often been compared to those used

49

The internet and drug markets

The feedback isnt always positive, however. This seller


is a f***ing scammer, i payed for hashish and now i have
40 grams of f***ing paraffin. DONT BUY FROM THIS
**** 1/5, is one example from Silk Road2.0 (Bartlett,
2015).
These negative pieces of feedback are often based on
the same aspects discussed above with respect to
positive feedback: the stealth, the quality of the product
and its delivery time. If the item doesnt arrive at all, a
buyer can also leave feedback saying so.
Overall, however, the ratings left by buyers seem to be
positive, or at least that was the case on Silk Road2.0.
Over three months, 120000 pieces of feedback were
left on the site, with the average rating attached to the
corresponding listings being 4.85 out of 5 and great
fast and good being the most common words left on
the written feedback section (Bartlett, 2015).
On top of these individual product ratings, some markets
employ vendor ratings. On the now-defunct Evolution
market, vendors were given a level, ranging from one to
five (one being the lowest and five being the highest). As
for how this helps buyers, it is reasonable to assume that
a Level5 heroin dealer, for example, is experienced and
perhaps also offers a good-quality product, because
presumably the vendors items have been popular in the
past.
The rating and feedback system is not infallible, however,
and it can be abused, as has also been the case with
legitimate marketplaces.

I Abuse of ratings and feedback


One scam involves the drug vendor generating only the
appearance that they are trustworthy and have served
customers in the past. Padding feedback, as the
practice is known, is when a vendor purchases drugs
from themselves using a series of buyer accounts that
they have created. To anyone else using the
cryptomarket and looking at the ratings and feedback, it
appears that the customers are legitimate, when in fact
they are simply aliases of the vendor.
Another way the rating system can be abused is by
vendors building up a reputation for being reliable, and
then deliberately making an unexpected switch in
behaviour and scamming users out of their bitcoins.
Over time, a vendor with consistently high ratings is likely
to be deemed generally trustworthy by users of the

50

cryptomarket. This in turn may mean that users feel


comfortable enough to finalise early; that is, send their
full payment for the product to the vendor before it has
been shipped (vendors sometimes ask for this payment
method when the value of bitcoin is fluctuating wildly).
However, a vendor can abuse this trust to accept as
many payments as possible without shipping any drugs
until users start to notice the discrepancy. The vendor
will then close their account and disappear with the
stockpiled bitcoins. This is commonly known as an exit
scam (Christian, 2014).
One example is the vendor Tony76 from the original Silk
Road, who used his reputation, built up through the
rating system, to lull users into a false sense of security.
During a sale to celebrate 4/20 (20 April, a date popular
in the United States for recreational drug use), Tony76
offered large discounts on his products, as well as
allowing orders from outside the United States for the
first time (ONeill, 2014). Tony76 even went so far as to
offer prizes to random customers as part of the sale.
Some buyers started to complain that their packages
werent arriving. In response, Tony76 started issuing
partial refunds to unsatisfied customers. However,
vendors cannot comprehensively check these claims of
failed deliveries, so Tony76 instead switched to the
finalise early system, meaning that customers had to
pay the full product price in advance. Because users
believed him to be trustworthy, they agreed to send their
bitcoins to Tony76 before the product had been shipped.
Tony76 then reportedly failed to deliver the items and
disappeared with the funds. This is a case of the rating
system working disproportionately in the vendors favour
(Ormsby, 2012).
Another, more recent, case involved 9THWonder, a
cannabis vendor from the now closed Evolution
cryptomarket (Christian, 2015). However, these scams,
and abuse of the rating and feedback systems in
general, are reportedly relatively rare.

I Reviews
As well as ratings and their accompanying short pieces
of feedback, some users write much longer, in-depth
reviews of a particular product or batch of drugs. These
can appear on the forums of cryptomarkets or on other
social media.

CHAPTER 5 IReputation is everything: the role of ratings, feedback and reviews in cryptomarkets

FIGURE 5.2
Example of a template from Reddit
Information

Details

_Vendor:

[EmeraldTriangle]

_Market:

[Abraxas]

_Product:

[1/2oz Blue Dream]

_Shipped from:

[USA]

_Shipped to:

[USA]

_Required FE:

[NO]

_Vacuum Sealed:

[Yes]

_Decoy:

[No]

_Handwriting:

[No]

Rating
_Communication:

[10]/10

_Stealth:

[10]/10

_Shipping time:

[10]/10

_Price value:

[10]/10

_Aesthetics:

[10]/10

_Weight:

[10]/10

_Quality:

[10]/10

_Transaction:

[10]/10

_Vendor:

[10]/10

_Drug:

[10]/10

Total score:

[100]/100

Extremely potent when turned into butter. A quarter oz was turned into a
stick of butter, which made 16 1x1" brownies. One brownie sent a 200lb
muscly man into a wild trip. Be careful. (Gosh-Damit, 2015).

One of the popular hubs for this activity is the


DarkNetMarkets sub-Reddit. Reddit is a social media site
that allows users to create sections of the site dedicated
to certain topics, or sub-Reddits. Naturally, the
DarkNetMarkets sub-Reddit deals in cryptomarket news,
as well as being a space where users can post reviews of
vendors and their products.
Many of these reviews follow a template that has been
uploaded by a user. It includes a wide array of
information, including where the drug was shipped from,
the quality of the product, its value for money, the
communication between the buyer and seller, and the
level of the sellers security (whether or not they used
their own handwriting for the packaging labels, or
whether or not the package containing the drugs was
vacuum-sealed, for example). These are presented in a
clear, easy to digest format, along with any additional
comments from the reviewer. Below is an example of a
completed template uploaded to Reddit.

Other reviews are much more personal, and detail the


users experience with the drug rather than strictly the
quality of the product itself. One dark web forum, The
Majestic Garden, provides a section for users to submit
their own trip reports. These vary in length, from a few
short sentences to pages worth of content, but they
often pay great attention to detail, describing the dosage
consumed, which vendor the drugs were brought from
and the users subjective experience of the drug.
The report continues, detailing what music the user
listened to, how the trip progressed into the comedown
and how it ended.
At the time of writing, there have been over 45 replies to
this forum thread, although not all of those are trip
reports, as some are supportive messages or thanks
from other users.
One particular group stands out when it comes to
providing reviews of drugs sourced from cryptomarkets.
The LSD Avengers, as the name suggests, focused on
the use of psychedelic drugs, although they also
provided reviews for MDMA. When they started, they
were based on the original Silk Road. According to
Jeffries (2014), the Avengers began ordering from
different vendors on the site, subjecting their wares to a
chemical reagent test and a gas chromatography
mass-spectrometry machine. If the drug was in fact
FIGURE 5.3
A screenshot of a trip report from The Majestic Garden,
a dark web forum

Transcript of above: Trip report for Blueviking House


Xtal 100ug tab one such report starts. I took 2 of the
100ug tabs at 4:00 pm at the 30 min mark I felt a very

Guides on how to write more helpful reviews have also


been posted on the DarkNetMarkets sub-Reddit
(entactoBob, 2015). Advice includes covering the main
areas of interest to users (communication, product and
price, and market), as well as including images and
making sure that the review is clearly formatted.

strong electrical feeling in the back of my head and


butterflys in my stomach,I then start laughing like a
MadWomen for 10 min,when that was over I started to
get some crazy leg tremors, Kinda freaked me out for a
bit, after about 30 min of tremors it subsided into pure
bliss, like an old friend come home to see you.

51

The internet and drug markets

LSD, the Avengers consumed it and posted Yelp-like


reviews.
These reviews were similar to those carried out by
individual users of cryptomarkets, but, thanks to the
tests performed by the LSD Avengers, were generally
considered more detailed. They also primarily reviewed
vendors rather than individual products. Some examples
provided by Jeffries (2014) include:
3JANE Canada to International. Known fondly as the
Queen of SR. Quality LSD with appropriate dosages
advertised. Extreme Ninja-Spy stealth shipping with

along with efforts by unofficial groups like the Avengers,


created a system that rewarded dealers who sold good
stuff (Jeffries, 2014). Indeed, to be successful as a
vendor on the cryptomarkets, it turns out the key to their
success is not clever encryption, or bitcoin, or even Tor.
Its good old-fashioned customer service (Bartlett, 2015).
In a way, thanks to reputation systems, the
cryptomarkets have developed an organic method of
self-regulation: vendors who sell low-quality products or
who provide poor customer service will simply not
receive good ratings, feedback or reviews, so arguably
only those providing high-quality products will survive.

friendly communication.
HAIZENBERG Czech to International. Extremely
friendly and personable customer service with
consistent product and regular stock. Currently selling:
Hofmann, Dancing Bears and Strawberrys (advertising
110ug) Trip Test Hofmann: ~100ug.
MARIJUANAISMYMUSE/GOINGPOSTAL Canada to
International. Vials and some other shit. Last time we
tried to test them they packaged the acid so badly that
it was seized in transit. A few past selective scamming
claims from trusted members, so be absolutely sure to
read their FE [finalise early] and refund policies. We still
dont know the quality/consistency of the acid because
it was taken by LE [law enforcement] and will not be

Reputation systems can also provide information to


users about product quality and potential risks.
According to Harry, a pseudonymous heroin and crack
cocaine addict who purchased drugs from the first and
second Silk Road sites, the rating systems were
especially useful for ensuring that he received a
consistent quality of product (Cox, 2014). When
purchasing drugs from a street dealer, there is no way of
knowing how strong any given batch is, [making] it near
impossible to manage dosage properly, according to
Harry. On cryptomarkets, however, a consistent product
is likely to be labelled as such thanks to the reviews and
ratings left by other users. If there is a sudden dip or
increase in drug quality, this will probably be highlighted
by the community.

able to test them for safety reasons.

In all, the LSD Avengers reviewed 60 vendors, and


ranked 14 star sellers, 19 vendors who were OK and
27bad sellers (Jeffries, 2014). The group entered
retirement in October 2014, but a few months later they
re-emerged on their own forum, the previously
mentioned The Majestic Garden.

I Why reputation matters


Reputation systems appear to instil buyers with greater
confidence in using cryptomarkets. Surveys have
indicated that vendor ratings are one of the main
reasons that users are attracted to cryptomarkets, with
6065% of respondents saying that the existence of
ratings was a motivation for using the original Silk Road,
and that they were more comfortable purchasing drugs
from vendors with a higher rating (Barratt et al., 2014).
So when reputation systems are in place, it creates an
environment where the best dealers, or at least those with
the highest ratings, may be rewarded with more
customers. The seller-rating system built into the site,

52

The cryptomarket community can also use these


reputation systems to flag vendors who sell one
substance under the pretence that it is something else
entirely. In one post on the DarkNetMarkets sub-Reddit,
a user accused a vendor of selling PMA, or
paramethoxyamphetamine, as MDMA (SilentRaider3,
2015). Although the drugs have similar effects, it takes
longer for the user to feel PMAs effects, meaning that,
thinking that they havent take enough, they may ingest
more and overdose. If we had taken MDMA dosages, we
would all be [f******] dead now, the complaining user
wrote.
This harm reduction element is reflected in the
motivation of those who encourage reviewing or write
reviews themselves. According to the Reddit user who
constructed one of the commonly used templates for
reviews, I do this to encourage vendor reviews, because
it helps keep our markets safer than they would be
otherwise and adds some degree of accountability
(entactoBob, 2015).
The primary motivation of the LSD Avengers was
reportedly to expose dealers who were selling research
chemicals as traditional hallucinogens, as well as to

CHAPTER 5 IReputation is everything: the role of ratings, feedback and reviews in cryptomarkets

discover the best-quality LSD available on the deep web.


Specifically, they were searching for needlepoint acid, a
particularly potent variation of LSD (Jeffries, 2014).

I Recent developments
More recently, some cryptomarkets have experimented
with contracts, in various forms. AlphaBay, a market that
launched in December 2014, and was still up and
running at the time of writing, implemented a feature the
administrators of the site dubbed digital contracts.
Each contract costs USD5, which is payable to the
administrators, and can contain anything that two
contracting parties desire. This is as long as it relates to
products already traded on the market: the owners of
AlphaBay made it explicit that they would not tolerate
contracts being used to hire hit men, for example.
Vendors can already create custom listings for buyers if
they desire, if they wish to purchase a bulk amount that
isnt already listed, for example. But these new contracts
are for more long term business, according to the owner
of AlphaBay (Cox, 2015). The terms of the contract are
then signed by the AlphaBay administrators with a PGP
key. If one of the parties involved feels theyve been
cheated, they can raise a dispute with the sites
administrators; in this way, the market is similar to
PayPal or other e-commerce services. A decision will be
made about whether or not one of the parties should be
stated to have failed the contract. This failure will then
be added to the offending users profile, for everybody to
see, and if a user is deemed to be particularly
untrustworthy, they may be banned from the site all
together. If the contract is successful, and both parties
are satisfied with the result, then a completed note will
be added to the users profiles.
These contracts, however, will not stop people scamming
other users outright. It is perfectly possible for a user to
repeatedly fail their contracts, or to make multiple
accounts with the sole purpose of scamming while
avoiding detection. There is also the problem of possible
bias in a site administrator: the person enforcing the
contract may have made another deal with one of the
involved parties, perhaps to take their side in any
dispute.
There have been other developments in the area of
digital contracts, notably from OpenBazaar, a
decentralised platform for trading goods (drwasho,
2014).

I Conclusion
Reputation systems, rather than being a tacked-on
feature, are essential for the functioning of
cryptomarkets. They are important in enabling buyers to
make informed decisions, they are used by vendors to
build up trust over time and they also regulate vendors
on cryptomarkets. Scams and abuse still exist, but it
appears that they are carried out by a minority of
vendors.
As well as supporting the smooth functioning of
cryptomarkets, reputation systems may also have a
protective role in contributing to stamping out vendors
who sell dangerous batches of drugs or those who sell
something other than what they advertise.

I References
I

 arratt, M., Ferris A. and Winstock, A. (2014), Use of Silk Road,


B
the online drug marketplace, in the United Kingdom, Australia
and the United States, Addiction 109(5), pp.774783.

 artlett, J. (2015), What dark net drug buyers say about


B
their dealers, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/
internet/11466413/What-dark-net-drug-buyers-say-abouttheir-dealers.html. Last accessed 29/5/2015.

 hristian, J. (2015), The exit scam is the darknets perfect


C
crime, http://motherboard.vice.com/read/darknet-slangwatch-exit-scam

 ox, J. (2014), Buying your drugs online is good for you,


C
https://www.vice.com/read/silk-road-is-good-for-you

 ox, J. (2015), This dark web market just started offering


C
contracts for anything, http://motherboard.vice.com/read/
alphabay-contracts

 rwasho (2014), Ricardian contracts in OpenBazaar, https://


D
gist.github.com/drwasho/a5380544c170bdbbbad8

 ntactoBob (2015), Useful templates for reviewing DNM


E
vendors and their products, https://www.reddit.com/r/
DarkNetMarkets/comments/2uyrs7/psaarticle_useful_
templates_for_reviewing_dnm/

 osh-Damit (2015), Emerald Triangle 1/2oz Blue Dream,


G
https://www.reddit.com/r/DarkNetMarkets/
comments/35xn6c/vendor_review_emerald_triangle_12oz_
blue_dream/

 arris, S. (2013), Feds bust the Amazon of drugs, seize its


H
untraceable loot, http://foreignpolicy.com/2013/10/02/
feds-bust-the-amazon-of-drugs-seize-its-untraceable-loot/

 effries, A. (2014), The LSD Avengers, Silk Roads selfJ


appointed drug inspectors, announce retirement, https://
www.theverge.com/2013/10/14/4828448/silk-road-lsdavengers-drug-inspectors

53

The internet and drug markets

54

 opstein, J. (2013), How the eBay of illegal drugs came


K
undone, http://www.newyorker.com/tech/elements/how-theebay-of-illegal-drugs-came-undone

 Neill, P. (2014), How the Deep Webs biggest 4/20 sale


O
helped bring down the Silk Road, http://www.dailydot.com/
crime/tony76-420-sale-silk-road/

 rmsby, E. (2012), The great 420 scam, http://allthingsvice.


O
com/2012/05/30/the-great-420-scam/

 ilentRaider3 (2015), Frosties2014 selling PMA as MDMA,


S
https://www.reddit.com/r/AgMarketplace/
comments/342odf/frosties2014_selling_pma_as_mdma/

II

SECTION II

Dark net markets key actor


perspectives

CHAPTER 6

Silk Road: insights from interviews with users


and vendors
CHAPTER 7

The emergence of deep web marketplaces:


a health perspective
CHAPTER 8

The drug trade on the deep web:


a law enforcement perspective
CHAPTER 9

How the use of the internet is affecting drug


trafficking practices
57

I Overview
This section explores internet drug markets from the perspectives of a
number of central protagonists in dark net markets, the experiences of Silk
Road users, a frontline health professional working in cryptomarkets and a
law enforcement representative are presented.
In Chapter 6, Eileen Ormsby, who has been following Silk Road and
blogging on the topic from its inception, presents findings from her
interviews with a variety of Silk Road users, including sellers, buyers and
administrators. She provides insight into the social profiles of Silk Road
users and their motives for engaging in this cryptomarket. She also
explores the ideology and sense of community central to the early Silk
Road marketplace and forums. She concludes her chapter with user
feedback on the closure of Silk Road marketplace and the consequences of
its disappearance.
For Fernando Caudevilla, dark net marketplaces offer opportunities and a
setting for targeted actions aimed at reducing risks associated with drug
use. As he explains in Chapter 7, cryptomarkets can be a virtual setting for
harm reduction interventions. As a physician, Fernando has been providing
information and advice from a risk reduction perspective to drug users in
dark net marketplaces since 2013 through his own forum thread (Ask a
Drug Expert Physician about Drugs and Health). In this chapter, Dr
Caudevilla shares his experiences of providing health advice in these
forums and presents results from drug testing of samples purchased
online.
In Chapter 8, Joost van Slobbe introduces the law enforcement approach
to combatting online drug supply via dark net markets. He explores the
similarities and differences between actual and digital market places, the
key market players, law enforcement strategies, as well as intended and
actual effects.
In Chapter 9, Anita Lavorgna presents a criminological analysis of drug
supply and trafficking covering both the deep and the surface web. She
explores the different levels at which the internet is used for drug supply
and distribution purposes, the new criminal opportunities offered through
online markets and the need for proactive online policing.
59

CHAPTER 6

Silk Road: insights from interviews


with users and vendors
Eileen Ormsby

I Introduction
Between January 2011 and October 2013, Silk Road,
dubbed the eBay or Amazon of illicit drugs, grew from
an underground black market known by few, to a slick
commercial enterprise that had been accessed by over a
million people. It is estimated that, in a little under three
years, the sites users spent around USD200million
(Flitter, 2015) on a range of drugs: cannabis, prescription
drugs, MDMA, LSD, heroin, crystal meth; in fact, every
illicit drug.
Silk Road was the first of the contemporary dark net
markets to provide a mainstream clientele with an
anonymous, accessible method of purchasing drugs.
This chapter presents the findings from interviews with
hundreds of users of Silk Road carried out over three
years. It gives an overview of the types of people using
Silk Road, what they purchased and their reasons for
preferring the online model over traditional methods of
procuring drugs.
Interviews and the collection of individual stories were
carried out by an investigative journalist over a number
of years. Participants included Australian-based buyers,
who provided their stories in person or by telephone, and
active members of the Silk Road marketplace and
forums from around the world, who provided their stories
by email, private forum messages or encrypted chat.
Those participants usually remained anonymous. Any
who claimed to be prominent members of Silk Road
(staff or vendors) could verify their pseudonyms in a
variety of ways, most often using PGP encryption and
signatures. Some participants responded to requests for
interviews and case studies for mainstream and
independent news stories and blog posts or for inclusion
in a book. Others contacted the journalist independently
to tell their stories.
It is accepted that there is a self-reporting bias in the
stories, as certain people may be more inclined to agree
to an interview. In particular, those who proactively

sought out the opportunity to tell their stories were keen


to dispel common notions of drug users as junkies and
thieves and may have presented an incomplete or
one-sided version of their drug habits.

I The Silk Road user


Believe it or not I am pretty much as technically
unsavvy as they come but I had heard someone
talking about getting drugs online from a little place
called Silk Road. Did a little searching, a little
researching, and next thing I know I find myself
amongst a very different community. Dan(1)

Drug users come from all backgrounds and


demographics. Computer use is no longer the domain of
the young and technologically advanced. Thus, there is
no truly typical Silk Road user. However, several key
themes came up repeatedly among the users who
provided interviews.1

I Who?
I work hard, I pay my taxes. Id never hurt anyone on
purpose. If I choose to wind down with something I
enjoy more than alcohol, why does that bother
anyone else? Malcolm

According to the prosecution case against Ross Ulbricht


(who has been convicted of being the founder and
owner-operator of Silk Road), Silk Road users were
almost exclusively based in the United States, the United
Kingdom, other parts of Europe, and Australia and New
(1) All names have been changed or online pseudonyms used.

61

The internet and drug markets

Zealand (United States District Court Southern District


of New York, 2013).
Although coming from a broad demographic, the
majority of those Silk Road users who agreed to be
interviewed were employed with disposable income,
technologically literate and aged in their 20s to 40s.
However, the sites users ranged from teens to one
member who claimed to be in his 70s. Some used Silk
Road to purchase medicinal cannabis, others to feed
addictions, but most were recreational users.
Every buyer interviewed had used drugs prior to finding
Silk Road. None reported deciding to try drugs only
because they had discovered the marketplace. Most
heard about Silk Road through friends; many found it
after reading a media story. A few discovered it through
the early online equivalent of word of mouth, niche
internet discussion forums, where news of the site first
spread in January 2011.
Stacey was in her late 30s when first interviewed in
2011, professionally employed and a heavy recreational
drug user. Her drug use began in her mid-teens and she
never considered herself a problem user, occasionally
abstaining for several months with no ill effects.
The drugs she used changed over time. In her teens, it
was cannabis and speed (amphetamine), but as she got
older she settled on MDMA and psychedelics as her
drugs of choice, with cocaine a special treat when she
could afford it. Before Silk Road, her pattern of
purchasing was typical of many recreational users. She
bought from friends of friends, or from small-time
dealers to whom she was introduced by acquaintances.
Most of them didnt last long, she said. She would find a
trustworthy and reliable dealer and they would stop
dealing, or become less reliable, for a variety of reasons,
most often a dearth of product.
A number of Staceys friendship circle also agreed to be
interviewed. All were within a similar demographic: late
30s to early 40s, employed and with disposable income.
More than half had children. They ranged from
occasional to regular recreational drug users. None
considered themselves criminals. All felt that Silk Road
provided a more sophisticated and convenient method
for purchasing drugs that was more congruent with their
lifestyles than sourcing from the street.

It was like being a kid in a candy store. John

62

There were those who rediscovered drugs through Silk


Road: people in their 50s and 60s who had used
cannabis and LSD in their youth but who no longer had
or wanted contact with drug scenes. Some of these
users also discovered new drugs as a result of
participating in Silk Road.

I came for the drugs. I stayed for the revolution.


anonymous Silk Road member

Although the majority of Silk Road users were interested


solely in buying quality drugs in a safe and convenient
setting, some were attracted by the ideals and
philosophies espoused by the sites owner, Dread Pirate
Roberts.
Silk Road was built on a platform of agorism(2) and
anarcho-capitalism, with the stated intention of building
a free-market system that would eradicate coercive force
by the state. Few users interviewed subscribed wholly to
the hardline free-market position of the sites leader, but
all had libertarian views when it came to the right to
choose what to put in ones own body.
Those interviewed had both left- and right-wing political
views. Many did not believe an unregulated illicit drug
market was an ideal manner of acquiring drugs; it just
happened to be the best way available while their drugs
of choice were illegal. Most of those interviewed would
have preferred to see an end to prohibition and the War
on Drugs, something that would put markets such as
Silk Road out of business altogether.

I saw the relative ease that came with it. There was
a personal level of safety [from law enforcement],
as well as anonymity. heroin dealer Michael
Duch, aka Deezletime (United States District
Court Southern District of New York, 2015)

The dealers interviewed invariably shared characteristics


with many of their street-dealing counterparts. They were
males in their 20s to 40s (or at least that was what they
claimed; most dealers were reluctant to meet face to
face and interviews were conducted via encrypted
message). Many of them were former small-time street
dealers who had found a new, lucrative market.

(2) Founded by Samuel Edward Konkin III, agorism is a libertarian


philosophy based on market anarchism with the ultimate goal of bringing
about a society in which all relations between people are voluntary
exchanges. Konkin believed in a totally free market devoid of violence or
coercion by either market participants or the state.

CHAPTER 6 ISilk Road: insights from interviews with users and vendors

However, interviews with vendors also suggested that a


new breed of drug dealer was emerging. While most had
experience of procuring and supplying drugs to their
friends, some had never dreamed of dealing on a more
professional level. They were ill equipped to become part
of the drug trade that included contact with hardened
criminals. Dark net markets provided them with an
opportunity to sell drugs anonymously and safely.
Although many Silk Road dealers were one-man
operations, the more popular vendors required a team of
staff to keep up with demand. They would split tasks
across the team, so that those who ran the computer
side of the business were never in possession of drugs.

I What?
Silk Road was a marketplace from which any illicit drug
could be purchased. The majority of users who granted
interviews were recreational users of MDMA,
psychedelics and cannabis. Few of those interviewed
were purchasers of heroin or methamphetamine,
although whether or not this was a result of selfselection bias is difficult to determine. However, reading
through the forums and viewing the most popular
listings on the marketplace seemed to confirm that the
most popular purchases were soft or party drugs.
Such anecdotal evidence was bolstered by the results of
a global drug survey conducted by dance and clubbing
magazine Mixmag in conjunction with The Guardian in
2012. Over 15000 people from around the world filled in
the online survey, which posed a wide range of questions
about drug use. It included questions about Silk Road
(Winstock et al., 20122014).
The findings from this survey relating to Silk Road were
published in the academic journal Addiction (Barratt et
al., 2014). MDMA was the most popular drug purchased
by Silk Road users in the three countries that made up
the bulk of Silk Roads customers (the United States, the
United Kingdom and Australia). This was followed by
cannabis, LSD and cocaine. Heroin and
methamphetamine did not feature in the top 10.
These statistics, which were self-reporting by survey
respondents, were empirically backed up some time
later by researchers Judith Aldridge and David DcaryHtu in a 2014 academic study. They collected data by
crawling the visible listings on the Silk Road website.
They estimated that in annual revenue terms, the vast
majority of sales were for cannabis (USD 24.8million),
MDMA (USD 19.9million) and psychedelics (USD
8.6million). Drugs associated with drug dependence,

harmful use and chaotic lifestyles (heroin,


methamphetamine and crack cocaine) do not appear
much on Silk Road, and generate very little revenue
(Aldridge and Decary-Hetu, 2014).
This is not to say that there were no problem users on
Silk Road. One heroin user claimed Silk Road had been a
godsend. He credited it with providing him with a
regular, affordable supply of consistent quality that
allowed him to function and hold down his job while
maintaining his addiction. However, he also said that the
necessary delay between ordering and receiving the
heroin was helping him get off the drug: learning to have
to wait till next day, made me finally realise that I could
waitdelay, delay its given me a last chance at life
(Paul, October 2013).

The group I am in charge of wholesales MDMA here


in the UK and I had originally considered vending
that on the road, but at the time, nobody bought
more than a few hundred dollars worth of products.
StExo

Silk Road was designed to bring together buyers and


sellers of small personal quantities of drugs. The creator
of the site, when first advertising it, described it as kind
of like an anonymous amazon.com (Bitcointalk.org,
2011), suggesting that, as with Amazon, the purchaser
would be the end-user of the product. Interviews with
Silk Road purchasers supported this. All who agreed to
be interviewed bought drugs from the website for their
personal use.
Aldridge and Decary-Hetu (2014) challenged this notion,
stating that their research led them to believe that Silk
Road was an online marketplace catering primarily to
those making purchases for resale; that is, to street drug
dealers buying stock to sell offline.
They recognised that some of their data included people
who may have been buying for personal use over a
longer term, or perhaps making social supply
purchases on behalf of a group of friends, but stated
that they thought these accounted for only a small
number of the larger purchases.
Interviews with users suggested stockpiling and social
supply to be the norm, rather than the exception. Most
buyers were more concerned about having a high
quantity of envelopes delivered than about receiving a
high volume of drugs in one delivery. The charge is the
same whether I buy one gram or ten [grams of MDMA],
said Joel, so why risk a bunch of deliveries where one

63

The internet and drug markets

might get picked up and tip off my address to


customs?
Ten grams of MDMA a quantity that is considered by
law enforcement to be for supply rather than personal
use was a typical order for a regular user or festivalgoer. Stacey claimed that 10g would last maybe four
weeks, although she did admit that having such
quantities easily available made her more likely to top
up as soon as the effects started diminishing, and also
made her more generous in sharing the drugs with
friends than she otherwise might have been.

In the old days, when youd buy five pills for around
the same amount as you can buy five grams of
MDMA on Silk Road [equivalent to around 3040
capsules, depending on strength], youd be more
likely to keep them all to yourself.

As with recreational users in real life, social supply was


also common. A group of friends would pool resources
and the one member of the group who had access to Silk
Road would place the order. Risk was shared by rotating
the address to which the order would be mailed. This
would enable the group to receive discounts for larger
orders and to build up strong buyer statistics. Because
they gave vendors access to quantity and volume of
purchases, accounts with good buyer stats were given
certain advantages. They might receive promotional
freebies or overweight orders and were more likely to be
offered a no-questions-asked re-ship if they claimed that
items had gone missing, rather than having to go to Silk
Road to resolve a dispute.

Many people here purchase in bulk as well as retail


quantities. Dread Pirate Roberts

Although information gathered from interviews


suggested that it was only end-users who purchased
from Silk Road, it is likely that those who bought to make
offline sales locally were less inclined to be interviewed.
StExo, who found that there was not enough demand for
bulk MDMA in early 2012, went on to run a money
laundering business instead. However, Aldridge and
Decary-Hetus findings that the quantities sold indicated
that dealers were purchasing to sell offline resulted from
analysis after Silk Road had been operational for a
couple of years. By then, it had enough of a customer
and vendor base to attract bulk purchases.

Australian purchasers of bulk quantities often bought in


order to re-sell to Australian Silk Road customers. They
would buy large amounts of (most often) MDMA from the
United States or Europe, which would then be divided
into capsules and sold to Australian users who did not
want to risk a customs seizure or wanted overnight
delivery. The dealers profit in this situation would be
around 400%.

I Why?
Several key themes emerged consistently from the
interviews when exploring why drug users chose to buy
from Silk Road rather than using traditional methods.
These were price (in some regions), availability and
convenience, quality, eradication of violence and
libertarian ideals. Vendors cited similar reasons for
choosing to sell online, although profitability was
paramount.

I Price and availability


The number one reason users gave for buying online was
the price and availability of their drug of choice. For the
geographically isolated Australians and New Zealanders,
recreational drugs particularly the most popular,
MDMA and LSD cost a quarter of the normal price
when ordered overseas on Silk Road. Users in most parts
of the United States and Europe were also happy with
the prices, although these were not as dramatically
different as in Australia and New Zealand.
The range of products on offer was also a factor.
Different strains of cannabis, designer psychedelics that
were otherwise hard to come by and prescription drugs
were easily available. Those interviewed who had tried
new drugs as a result of participating in Silk Road
invariably stuck to similar types of substances to those
they already favoured. Thus, someone who enjoyed LSD
and mushrooms might try psychedelics in the 2C family,
the most popular of which was 2C-B.
Some users found that Silk Road meant they could order
their preferred drugs for use on holiday. Users would
arrange a delivery to their overseas hotel from a vendor
near their destination. They felt that this involved less
risk than smuggling drugs on an airplane, arguing that
good hotels are protective of their customers privacy
and would not question the arrival of a package.
For vendors, the overwhelming motivation for selling on
Silk Road was profitability. One vendor interviewed in

64

CHAPTER 6 ISilk Road: insights from interviews with users and vendors

early 2012 claimed a turnover of more than USD4000


per day, 75% of which was profit. Another, who sold a
variety of drugs, said that his profit on cocaine alone was
USD20000 per month. All of the vendors agreed that
the commission structure charged by Silk Road (612%
per transaction) was fair and reasonable.

ecstasy and discovered that, instead of MDMA, the


main ingredient in their pills was inferior piperazines or
PMA. Similarly, purchasers of LSD had found themselves
imbibing 25i, which has a toxicity not found in LSD.
Users reported few, if any, substitutions when
purchasing from Silk Road.

A seller who had built up a solid reputation could expect


hundreds of orders a day. I made it into the Top Ten, and
let me just say, the money is GOOD! said one vendor.
[Silk Road] could take 50% tax and Id still be making a
killing.

I Eradication of violence

Some markets were particularly lucrative. Personally I


am completely financially motivated in what I doI
went through the local Australian listings, did a bit of
maths and thought Wow, these guys are paying
ridiculous prices for their drugs, theres definitely profit
to be made here! said AussieDomesticDrugs, who sold
exclusively to Australian and New Zealand buyers.

I Quality and harm reduction


Samples of these purchases have been laboratory
tested and have typically shown high purity levels
of the drug the item was advertised to be on Silk
Road. FBI (United States District Court Southern
District of New York, 2013)

More importantly, users felt they were getting value for


money. The user feedback model that works so well on
sites such as eBay was just as effective on the black
market. Sellers had the incentive of repeat business to
ensure their product was as described. Regular online
black market users were sophisticated when it came to
spotting padded or faked feedback.
Occasional drug users invariably find that the quality of
their purchases is variable. Even those with reliable
small-time dealers have to rely on a long supply chain,
along which drugs may be cut or substituted. In addition
to the system of feedback, Silk Road spawned groups
such as the LSD Avengers, who tested and provided
detailed analyses of various vendors products. Like
restaurant reviewers, the LSD Avengers made purchases
anonymously and reported their findings, although they
soon found that vendors began to send them free
samples for review.
The tested quality of Silk Roads drugs assisted in harm
reduction. Many users had previously purchased

Its cheaper, its higher quality and I dont have to


meet some guy in an alley or a dodgy apartment
it comes to me. Whats not to like? Stacey

Buyers and sellers alike expressed the desire to be able


to make drug transactions without the fear of violence or
other problems often associated with traditional drug
deals. An online model, where both parties remained
anonymous and were probably geographically
separated, removed any possibility of an aggressive
resolution to a dispute between buyer and seller.
Female interviewees in particular perceived Silk Road as
providing them with a safe alternative to purchasing
drugs in person. Many had faced requests for sexual
favours in lieu of payment for drugs. Even when there
had been no repercussions to a refusal, female users
often felt frightened and intimidated by male sellers in
person.

The best thing about selling online is not having to


deal with people knocking on my door or ringing me
at all hours. AussieDomesticDrugs

Vendors were equally enthusiastic about not having to


deal with their customers face-to-face. Not only did
dealers have to be wary of customers, who might use
violence to rob them of their wares, many found that
habitual drug users could become irritating when looking
for drugs at short notice. They knew their dealers
addresses and their phone numbers and demanded that
they be available day and night. Silk Road provided them
with the opportunity to deal with orders at times
convenient to them, and to ensure their best customers
orders were prioritised.
Low-end street dealers might find that they need to
compete with other sellers nearby for local trade. Prolific
vendor JesusOfRave said that, rather than compete for
turf, the vendors of Silk Road collaborated and assisted

65

The internet and drug markets

each other: There are more buyers than sellers can


stock. There was no sense of competition for us during
our time on Silk Road.
Despite the fear of violence being an oft-quoted reason
for purchasing online rather than by traditional means,
the majority of interviewees admitted that they had
never faced any violent behaviour in their real-life
dealings. However, they were all acutely aware of the
potential for a deal to go sour, and the fear itself created
high levels of anxiety.

I Community and ideals


It really is more than a place to buy drugs. Its a
place to hang out, make friends and just talk shit.
Zach

For many, Silk Road was more than just a marketplace.


For them, the website had become a close-knit
community of people from all around the world with one
thing in common: illicit drugs. Although less than half of
those interviewed actively engaged in the Silk Road
discussion forums, many of those who did cited their
value as a source of advice, information and friendship.
In 1.2million posts on over 70000 topics, discussions
on the sites forums covered everything from
sophisticated methods of evading law enforcement to
favourite movies to watch when stoned. But they
covered much more than that. Dread Pirate Roberts
fostered a community that was active and highly
engaged. He encouraged philosophical discussions and
sharing of knowledge. The online community was
particularly important to those whose drug-taking was a
solitary pursuit.
Professionals shared their knowledge of chemistry, the
law in various jurisdictions and harm reduction. The drug
safety forum was one of the most popular; there,
members could receive useful, realistic advice on harm
reduction and the dangers of drugs, and assistance with
giving up highly addictive drugs. Silk Road member
DoctorX (see Chapter 7) was a family physician who
provided a service, dispensing advice aimed at
minimising potential harm from drug use.
The SR [Silk Road] community has probably been the
best support and advice Ive got actually, said former
methamphetamine user Ben. The mental health system

66

really isnt recognising, as best as I try to explain it to


them, what I am actually going through.

There is a great deal of cooperation and skill


sharing amongst vendors. JesusOfRave

JesusOfRave claimed that their team did not start selling


on Silk Road only because it was a new means of doing
what they were already doing selling drugs at a profit
but also because the team fully subscribed to the
philosophy of the site. This has a large part to do with
DPRs [Dread Pirate Roberts] writings. We feel we share
complementary ethics, said a representative.
JesusOfRave regularly engaged with customers and
other members in the forums.

I Silk Road seizure and law enforcement


efforts

Now Ive got to go back to associating with


criminals and the dregs of society to get my drug of
choice. And if thats not bad enough the quality of
the H [heroin] that I get in real life is sub-par to the
stuff I was getting on Silk Road. Paul

On 2October2013, Silk Road was seized; the site was


shut down and its owner arrested. The shutdown
apparently did nothing to stop drug users purchasing
their wares online, with a clone site appearing five weeks
later and several new, more technically robust, markets
opening and vying for market share.
Interviews conducted with users immediately after the
shutdown revealed that, for some, the seizure of Silk
Road was a catastrophe, but, for most, it was little more
than a temporary inconvenience. By the time Silk Road
was closed, many vendors were already active on two
other active black markets, Sheep and Black Market
Reloaded. Able to verify that they were dealing with the
same seller by use of encrypted signatures, users simply
migrated to the alternative websites.
Other users had by that time formed relationships with
their favourite suppliers, enabling them to make private
transactions via secured email, bypassing the black
markets altogether.
However, some were unnerved by the shutdown,
particularly in the weeks afterwards, when it was unclear

CHAPTER 6 ISilk Road: insights from interviews with users and vendors

if the technology that enabled anonymous buying and


selling had been compromised. Those users said they
would return to traditional methods of buying for the
time being, but expressed frustration that they would
have to go back to a system that had more inherent
dangers and flaws than the online model. No one
indicated that closure of the site would stop them using
drugs.

The damage was going to be considerable, I had a


lot in escrow on all of my buying and selling
accounts. Once I had calculated the damage it was
over $60,000 worth of BTC [bitcoins]. A lot less than
I had made in the time Id been selling there but a
considerable loss regardless. AussieDomesticDrugs

Vendors complained of losses of bitcoins held in escrow


that had yet to be released from orders dispatched in the
weeks before the shutdown, but most had already
signed on with the alternative markets. Their customers
soon followed them.
Overall, for vendors and buyers alike, the shutdown of
Silk Road was inconvenient but appeared to have little
effect in the medium term.

peer technology that is similar to that used to pirate


music, movies and software.
Notably absent in the current markets is the strong
community feeling fostered by Silk Road. The trial of
Ross Ulbricht in January and February 2015 was not a
major topic of conversation in the forums of Agora or
Evolution, the leading dark net markets at the time of
writing(3). Discussions concentrated on the quality of
the drugs, the best suppliers, avoiding scams and
evading law enforcement efforts.
Although some dark net market users lament the loss of
Silk Road, many have found it a relief. Silk Road courted
publicity at the end, putting a major target on their back,
said Sam. All these noobs stumbling their way in without
any sense of self-preservation became really annoying.
Were back to where we were supposed to be flying
under the radar.

I References
I

 ldridge, J. and Dcary-Htu, D. (2014), Not an eBay for


A
drugs: the cryptomarket Silk Road as a paradigm shifting
criminal innovation. Available at: http://ssrn.com/
abstract=2436643 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/
ssrn.2436643

 arratt, M.J., Ferris, J.A. and Winstock, A.R. (2014), Use of


B
Silk Road, the online drug marketplace, in the United Kingdom,
Australia and the United States, Addiction 109(5), pp.774
783.

Bitcointalk.org (http://bitcointalk.org) (2011), thread A Heroin


Store, post by Altoid, 29/1/2011.

 litter, E. (2015), U.S. sharply reduces Silk Roads estimated


F
sales volume, Reuters, 16/1/2015.

I
I

Konkin, S. E. III (2008), An Agorist Primer, KoPubCo, California.

 nited States District Court Southern District of New York


U
(2015), United States of America vs Ross William Ulbricht, trial
transcripts, JanuaryFebruary 2015.

 instock et al. (20122014), Global Drug Survey, findings


W
reported at www.globaldrugsurvey.com

I Conclusion
Users of Silk Road and other dark net markets are a
varied group, but several themes came through
repeatedly: the beliefs that drug use was not morally
wrong and that people had the right to take drugs
without interference from government or law
enforcement; relief at the opportunity to purchase drugs
in a safer environment (i.e. dealing with criminals
virtually rather than in person); a belief that the market
supported harm reduction by providing information on
the quality and contents of purchases; and a feeling that
Silk Road offered a sense of community.
The shutdown of Silk Road and the arrest of its owner
has seen the emergence of over 20 similar markets.
Some are single-item markets. Most are small. Two
Evolution and Agora grew to be bigger than the
original Silk Road. New markets seek to combat rogue
operators by offering multi-signature escrow, which
means the marketplace cannot access funds in escrow
without a second key, that of either buyer or seller.
Emerging markets plan to fight law enforcement
infiltration by becoming decentralised, using peer-to-

 nited States District Court Southern District of New York


U
(2013), United States of America vs Ross William Ulbricht
a/k/a Dread Pirate Roberts, Criminal Complaint, 27
September 2013.

(3) After just over a year of operation, the owners of Evolution carried out
an exit scam, closing the market without notice and absconding with the
bitcoin balances held in users accounts and in escrow.

67

CHAPTER 7

The emergence of deep web


marketplaces: a health perspective
Fernando Caudevilla

I Introduction
Deep web marketplaces (DWMs) represent a major
change in online drug trading. Although they are
currently a limited phenomenon, their operational
characteristics offer significant advantages for both
buyers and sellers, and it is likely that their importance
will grow. The structure of DWMs facilitates
communication, exchange and dissemination of
information. This provides opportunities for health
professionals to engage with users. This chapter
discusses some aspects of DWMs from a health
perspective and describes harm reduction strategies
developed specifically for DWMs.

I The internet, drugs and health


The internet has changed many aspects of healthcare.
Health professionals have traditionally been considered
an undisputed and unique source of knowledge, and the
role of patients has been to passively accept medical
advice. However, this relationship has been transformed
by the democratic access to information and the
interactivity provided by the internet. Virtual
communities, chats, discussion forums, online social
networking services and virtual libraries are tools that
change the balance of knowledge between health
professionals and the public, empowering patients to
become more involved in decisions related to their
health. The internet is also a powerful tool for
professionals, and clinicians and researchers have
increased access to scientific publications, guidelines
and professional tools that facilitate research and
improve knowledge and abilities. On the other hand,
dissemination of inaccurate or inadequate messages
can have negative health consequences and is a growing
concern, given that it is sometimes difficult to evaluate
the quality of information online.

In relation to illegal or recreational drugs, these changes


have been even more dramatic. Drug information
provided through traditional media has tended to focus
on universal prevention, encouraging people to reject
any use of illegal psychoactive substances, not
differentiating between use, abuse and dependence,
and often exaggerating the negative aspects and
consequences of drug use. In the age of the internet,
however, resources focused on harm reduction,
including more information about risks and harms, have
gained popularity.
Alexa Internet(1) is a company that provides web traffic
data analysis, classifies websites according to their
global popularity and generates a score (Alexa ranking
(AR)) that is considered the gold standard for
estimating the importance of websites on the internet,
with lower AR scores denoting greater popularity.
Websites aimed at providing harm reduction information,
such as Bluelight(2), Drugs Forum(3) and Erowid(4),
have higher Alexa rankings (Bluelight, 16356; Drugsforum, 19.965; Erowid, 20.670) than official prevention
web pages such as the US National Institute of Drug
Abuse(5) (28686) or the United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime (UNODC)(6) (50942). It is also important to
note that harm reduction websites are generally run by
volunteers or small non-governmental organisations with
limited technical and economic resources compared
with official government prevention websites. It is likely
that these virtual communities of individuals using the
internet all over the world are having an impact on social
perceptions about illicit drugs.

(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)

http://www.alexa.com
http://www.bluelight.org
http://www.drugs-forum.com
http://www.erowid.org
http://www.drugabuse.gov/
http://www.unodc.org/

69

The internet and drug markets

Online drug trading: from research

chemicals to deep web marketplaces

As with any other consumer goods, illicit drugs have


been offered online since the internet began. However,
until recently, their illegal status has made this business
extremely difficult in practice. Purchasing illicit drugs
through an internet website or forum on the surface web
gives no guarantee about the quality of the product or
that the product will actually arrive. Payment and
shipping allows the purchaser to be physically identified
and there is no possibility of lodging a complaint.
Nevertheless, small closed-access websites and forums
have always existed where select individuals can
purchase illicit drugs by invitation; their impact, however,
has been limited.
From the mid-90s to 2003, a limited selection of
psychoactive substances were offered online as
research chemicals. In general, they were
phenethylamine and tryptamine derivatives, coming
from discreet websites offering high-purity products.
Consumers were, in general, individuals with an interest
in psychoactive substances (so-called psychonauts); the
phenomenon didnt attract the attention of the media
and was of very limited significance. The US Drug
Enforcement Administration closed most of these
websites in July 2004.
The phenomenon re-emerged around 2007 in the form of
legal highs, with visually attractive websites employing
well-known marketing strategies such as special offers
and discounts (product of the week, buy 3 pay for 2,
etc.) and offering a wide variety of drugs (synthetic
cannabinoids, cathinone derivatives, pyrovalerones,
NBOMe series, methoxetamine, etc.) marketed as herbal
blends, incense, fertilisers, and so on. The main purpose
of this market was to sell non-controlled substances.
Most of the substances had not been studied in animals
and there was a lack of data about human toxicology or
psychoactivity from basic science studies. In many
cases, product samples contained a mixture of different
substances and, sometimes, products with identical
labels contained different active substances (Caudevilla
et al., 2013). There was high availability of these
substances, some of which have much potential for harm
(Johnson et al., 2013).
DWMs represent a significant change in the online drug
trade. Relations between vendors and consumers are
largely based on trust and professionalism, and are
supported by user feedback and resolution models (Van
Hout and Bingham, 2013). Forums linked to these
markets provide user advice, trip reports, and product

70

and transaction reviews. Some of these markets sell only


psychoactive substances and support or integrate a
harm reduction philosophy. In other cases, DWMs offer
not only drugs but also counterfeit goods, stolen credit
cards or weapons. However, offering child pornography,
services of murder for hire, traffic of persons or human
organs are strictly forbidden activities in these kinds of
markets.
DWMs can also provide a virtual setting for harm
reduction. The structure of DWMs allows the creation of
virtual communities that share information, knowledge
and experiences. For many individuals, it is not a matter
simply of buying drugs, but a question of belonging to a
community that shares similar interests. The implications
of these aspects for prevention deserve further and
more detailed research. Feedback from other users,
posts in forums and control by site administrators allow
users to be relatively well informed about the quality of
products. Many vendors state that their products have
been lab-tested and offer information about purity.
Users can leave their opinions about the quality of
products and experiences with vendors. Many vendors
communicate directly with users in forums, announce
when a new batch of a substance is available, provide
and share advice about safer use and openly discuss
quality, purity, adulterants and advertisements. This
system is imperfect, but it offers users more reliable
information than that provided in the traditional street
drug dealing system. So, in general, DWMs provide some
advantages for both buyers and sellers compared with
street-level distribution.
Technical difficulties in accessing and operating DWMs
and the fact that a real postal address must be provided
to receive the product are currently the main drawbacks
for many users. There is no clear estimate about the
market share of DWMs in relation to the whole global
trade in illicit drugs, but it is likely to be very limited at
present. Nevertheless, there are signs that suggest there
may be increased interest in the future.

Ask a Drug Expert Physician about


Drugs and Health

Internet forums are online discussion sites where people


can hold conversations in the form of posted messages.
Their structure is hierarchical: a forum can contain
different sub-forums dedicated to different themes
covering several topics or threads. In forums,
administrators manage the technical running of the site
and can give privileges to some users. Moderators are

CHAPTER 7 IThe emergence of deep web marketplaces: a health perspective

users or employees of the forum who have been granted


access to the posts and threads of all members for the
purpose of moderating discussions and managing
day-to-day affairs in the forum. The characteristics of
organisation, structure, classification of information,
democratic participation and simplicity of use make
these online forums very popular, and they are often
used as sources of information and sites where
discussion can take place.
Online drugs forums have been used for scientific,
medical and prevention research in different ways.
Analysing information contained in them is a simple way
to obtain some data (patterns of use of emerging drugs,
motivations, harm, etc.) that would be very difficult to
collect using other methods (Lefvre and Simioni, 1999;
Kjellgren et al., 2013; Mnsson, 2014). The use of internet
forums to recruit participants for studies can be very
helpful when the subject of the study has a low
prevalence or when it involves hard-to-reach populations
(Gonzlez et al., 2013; Caudevilla-Glligo et al., 2014).
The role of internet-based treatments using forums,
chats or mobile phone applications has also recently
been studied in fields such as smoking cessation (Civljak
et al., 2013), social anxiety disorder (Schulz et al., 2014)
and anxiety and depressive disorders (Schulz et al.,
2014). Online drug forums can also be an environment
where strategies for risk and harm reduction can be
provided to drug users.
Most DWMs have associated forums, usually
administrated or moderated by the same staff who run
the marketplace. Nine of the eleven popular DWMs
operating in February 2015 had an associated forum. At
this time, the forums in Evolution( 7 ) and Agora(8) were
the most popular, with thousands of registered users
and hundreds of new posts and messages every day.
Forums in DWMs have a similar structure to those in the
surface web: there is a general section for discussion
about the market, and also sub-sections where users
can discuss the quality of products, reviews of vendors,
security, packaging, legal aspects, bitcoin, and so on. In
most forums, there is also a sub-section dedicated to
drug safety where users discuss topics directly related
to drugs and health (patterns of use, intoxication,
adulterants, dosage, etc.).
The author of this chapter has been running threads
(entitled Ask a Drug Expert Physician about Drugs and
Health) in DWM forums providing information and
advice to drug users from a risk reduction perspective.
This service started in April 2013 in the original Silk Road

( 7 ) http://i25c62nvu4cgeqyz.onion
(8) http://lacbzxobeprssrfx.onion

TABLE 7.1
Summary of activity in an online health service for deep
web drug users
Number of Number of
Total
questions questions
visits
(public)
(private)

Market

Dates

Silk Road

Apr. to
Oct. 2013

321

67

36438

Silk
Road2.0

Dec. 2013 to
Nov. 2014

352

103

52725

Evolution

Dec. 2014 to
Feb. 2015

258

45

47244(1)

(1) Thread active; data up to 2/2/15.

forum(9) and moved to the Silk Road 2.0 forum(10) when


Silk Road was closed by the FBI. Silk Road2.0 was shut
down in November 2014 and, since then, its forum has
not been accessible. For this reason, the service was
moved to Evolution(11).
Most DWM users remain anonymous and do not give any
clues about their identity in the real world. The author
uses the nickname DoctorX in the deep web, but, in
order to gain credibility, DoctorXs real identity has been
revealed, with a link in the forum profile to a professional
web page with complete information about his profession
and skills. The service is free of charge, but supported by
anonymous and volunteer donations in bitcoins.
Ask a Drug Expert Physician about Drugs and Health
(threads in Silk Road, Silk Road2.0 and Evolution during
a 22-month period) had received 136407 visits on
3February 2015 and 1146 questions had been
answered, 931 in the public forum, accessible to any
visitor, and 215 as private messages from people who,
for whatever reason, wanted to ask their questions
privately. Data are summarised in Table7.1.
Although a structured qualitative analysis has not been
performed, the general impression is that the reception
of this service in the community has been very positive.
All the threads received many messages from users
expressing support, appreciation and gratitude. Some
users have offered collaboration, for example editing in
English, gathering similar answers to create a Frequently
Asked Questions section or referring users to DoctorXs
thread when questions about health are asked in
different posts or forums. Some vendors have also asked
questions aimed at improving safety of the products

(9) The original forum was closed by the FBI in October 2013. A complete
backup can be downloaded from http://antilop.cc/sr/download/
stexo_sr_forum.zip
(10) The forum was closed by the FBI/Europol in November 2014. No
copies have been found.
(11) Ask a Drug Expert Physician about Drugs and Health, Evolution
forum, http://i25c62nvu4cgeqyz.onion/viewtopic.php?id=35190
(available only through Tor).

71

The internet and drug markets

FIGURE 7.1
Number of questions answered by month
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20

Silk Road

Silk Road 2.0

Jan-15

Dec-14

Oct-14

Nov-14

Sep-14

Jul-14

Aug-14

Jun-14

Apr-14

May-14

Feb-14

Mar-14

Jan-13

Dec-13

Oct-13

Sep-13

Jul-13

Aug-13

Jun-13

Apr-13

May-13

Evolution

they are selling. The attitude of DWM administrators and


moderators has also been very collaborative: the thread
has always been highlighted, and technical or general
support has been offered in all cases. The popularity of
the thread has increased, as shown in Figure7.1, where
the number of questions answered each month in the
three markets during a 22-month period is presented.
Questions in the thread have been categorised using a
qualitative analysis technique that involves coding the
posts and collating them into meaningful and distinct
themes. The main themes that emerged are summarised
in the boxbelow.

Themes of frequently asked questions in


an online health service for deep web
drug users
n


Drug effects, patterns of use, dosage

Adverse effects

Medical contraindications


Pharmacological interactions with prescription


Pharmacological interactions with other illicit

Patterns for detoxification

Therapeutic use of cannabis

Neurotoxicity

Long-term effects of drugs

Urine detection of drugs

Use of drugs during pregnancy and lactation

drugs
drugs

72

In order to better understand the nature and


characteristics of questions asked in the Ask a Drug
Expert Physician about Drugs and Health, some
examples are shown in the boxon p.73. Case1 is
particularly notable. The questioner asked about
long-lasting symptoms that he attributed to opiate
abstinence. However, fever, profuse sweating,
enlargement of the lymph nodes and pain during the
night suggested the need for a complete medical
evaluation. A week later, the user posted in the forum
that he had this done after reading the answer and that
blood test results had revealed that he was suffering
from leukaemia (Ormsby, 2014).
A drug information and counselling service in a DWM
forum provided by a professional physician who
specialises in drugs and harm reduction is an
opportunity to reach drug users where they are. This
virtual outreach technique is perceived as reliable,
effective and able to provide useful information and skills
to drug users, although many aspects deserve further
and deeper evaluation. It also has its own limitations and
disadvantages, as messages in an internet forum
provide very limited information compared with a real,
face-to-face interview and intervention. It is important to
remember that many drug users are reluctant to ask their
questions of traditional health services because they
feel they will be judged, or are afraid of professionals
moral prejudices. In many parts of the world, services
aimed at drug users are simply non-existent.

Testing drugs purchased through deep


web marketplaces: the International
Drug Testing Service (IDTS)

Drug checking services are useful tools for reducing


numbers of drug-related incidents, monitoring new
substances or patterns of use, and providing information
and assessment to drug users. In Spain, the nongovernmental organisation Energy Control has been
offering its drug-checking service since 1999 as part of
an integrated harm reduction service for recreational
drug users. Recreational users, who do not usually seek
help or advice from substance abuse organisations, can
test their drugs at checking points (in clubs, raves, etc.)
or in Energy Controls offices in Spain. This service is
supported and financed by the Spanish Government
Delegation to the National Plan on Drugs and the
regional authorities. It is part of the EU Early Warning
System operated by the EMCDDA and Europol. Between
2010 and 2013, a total of 8348 samples were analysed.

CHAPTER 7 IThe emergence of deep web marketplaces: a health perspective

Some sample questions from an online health service for deep web drug users
CASE1: Silk Road original forum, private message,

sitter be there to remind me? Secondly, I have tripped

15September2013

in the past on LSD and mushrooms but that was

After several years of using injected and smoked

before my diagnosisnow that I know I have to

daily heroin I decided to quit this spring. I live in an

monitor my sugar levels to avoid issues Im afraid I

Eastern Europe country where detoxification

might become afraid or paranoid of my glucometer or

programs are unavailable. Doctors do not pay

my insulin injections under the influenceany

attention to heroin users and see them as scum,

recommendations on how to deal with this?

vicious people and not as ill persons. So I bought


some methadone on Silk Road and read in some

CASE3: Silk Road2.0 forum, 3January2014

online books how to do this.

I have a question about amphetamine usage.

After several weeks I managed to detox completely

I am in the age bracket of 2040 and in good health. I

methadone. I had read that it is normal to have

use pure amphetamine between 1570mg,

abstinence symptoms during weeks, but it is two

depending on what I am using it for.

months since I finished and I have pain in all my body,

Is 70mg of pure amphetamine safe to use in one go? I

changes of mood, sometimes diarrhea. This has not

have low tolerance and I do not go on binges.

been improving and it is getting worse. In the last two

Sometimes I may have a small top up, but I never go

weeks pain is extreme in the night and fever and

for more than 1216 hours at a time.

sweating are extreme. Even I have some swollen

Also, how frequently can I use it without causing harm

nodes down my armpits and neck.

to myself? I dont normally use it more than once a

I have gone to the hospital but they discharged me

fortnight, but sometimes I do and I was wondering if it

even without doing tests and saying that this was

is damaging to use it weekly, or even more than that?

abstinence from heroin (they didnt know that I had

Thanks for your time and effort.

used methadone and I didnt say, but in fact I did not


have the time to explain). I dont like to take more

CASE4: Evolution forum, 12December2014

opiates but I cant continue with this pain. I am

When taking NBomes my girlfriend gets red splotches

thinking about taking methadone again, maybe 510

on her face, legs, neck, back, an stomach

mg/daily. Will this be enough to quit these symptoms?

(vasoconstriction.) It usually happens toward the end

Maybe oxycodone or codeine are better options?

of the trip and gets worse when we stay up and trip all

Thank you in advance.

night. Usually redosing once. The tabs are no more


than 1200ug each. Is there a reason this happens to

CASE2: Silk Road original forum, 14April2013

her and not me? Is there any way to help with this? I

Hey doctor thanks so much for offering your advice! I

know it is not life threatening unless it gets really bad

have type1 diabetes and I am wondering if there is

and she gets stuck in her pants or something. () But

any information connected to MDMA and its effect on

for real. She is also anemic, does this have anything to

blood sugar? I have never done MDMA but am

do with it? Now that I think about it, it has happened

interested in exploring it. Would I have enough control

with MDMA, and it happened on M1 as well I think

over myself to realize I need to test or should a trip

(which was sent to me as MDMA.)

At the end of 2012 and during 2013, the Energy Control


team was aware of the growing popularity of DWMs
through information provided by recreational drug users.
An exploratory search of the available markets at that
time (Silk Road, Black Market Reloaded and Sheep)
prompted the development of the IDTS provided by
Energy Control and focusing on DWMs.
During the first quarter of 2014, a specific protocol with
objectives, procedures, methods and techniques was

elaborated using TEDI (Transnational European Drug


Information: TEDI, 2014) guidelines as a reference. All
samples were analysed by gas chromatographymass
spectrometry. The fee for a simple analysis was EUR50
(to be paid in bitcoins). All funds raised were put back
into running the project.
A one-year pilot project started in April 2014; drug users
who purchase drugs in DWMs were the target
population. Several threads in the main DWM forums

73

The internet and drug markets

were opened offering general information about the


IDTS with links to a specific IDTS page on Energy
Controls website(12). An email address for users to
contact the service for detailed information about the
process was made available. After submitting samples
for analysis, users receive a detailed report with drug
test results and specific and individualised harm
reduction information. Users were encouraged to engage
with Energy Control experts by emails or in DWM forums
in order to resolve their questions.
It is worth mentioning that this service is aimed at
end-users and that IDTS does not accept samples from
vendors. During the whole process, the service
emphasises that a test result is representative of the
analysed sample only and cannot be considered a
quality control for any product or vendor. The use of the
test results in DWMs as a guarantee of quality for
products or vendors is forbidden. Both DWMs and DWM
forums are periodically monitored to check that test
results have not been used in this way, but so far no
instances of this have been found.
Between April and December 2014, a total of 342 users
contacted IDTS asking for information about submitting
samples for analysis. A total of 129 samples were
analysed over this period, as shown in Figure7.2.
Users are asked about the type of substance they
believe they have purchased. In 120 of 129 samples
(93%), the main result of the analysis was consistent
with the information provided by the user. In the
remaining 9, the sample contained another drug, a
mixture of substances was detected or it was not
possible to determine the composition of the sample
with the analytical techniques employed. The main
results of the drug testing are shown in Table7.2.
Cocaine was the substance most frequently submitted
for analysis. Purity levels were high, although more than

FIGURE 7.2
Samples submitted for analysis by the Energy Control
International Drug Testing Service
(MarchDecember 2014)
25
20
15
10
5
0
Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Other samples analysed were MDA and


methamphetamine (n=3), 2C-E, alprazolam,
mephedrone, 2C-B, butyrfentanyl, synthetic
cannabinoids (n=2), clonazepam, DOB, DOET, DOM,
DON, DXM, kratom, mescaline, methylone, midazolam,
modafinil and pentobarbital (n=1).
Results for MDMA pills, showing very high dosages of
MDMA that can lead to significant adverse or toxic
effects, are similar to those reported by other harm
reduction groups offering drug testing programmes
(TEDI, 2014). The high frequency of non-adulterated
cocaine samples is also notable, although levamisole
contamination seems to be a widespread problem, as
reported in the rest of the global drug market.

Sample

Only main compound detected

Purity (mSD)

Range

Cocaine

54

48.1% (26/54)

70.319.9%

599%

MDMA (crystal)

100% (9/9)

91.18.0%

7899%

MDMA (pills)

100% (8/8)

142.140.2mg

94188mg

Amphetamine (speed)

37.5% (3/8)

51.634.6%

1098%

LSD

100% (8/8)

129.712.1 g

107140g

Cannabis resin

100% (5/5)

THC: 16.57.5%
CBD: 3.41.5%

THC: 9.116.4%
CBD: 1.65.3%

Ketamine

40% (2/5)

71.338.4%

2795%

(1) Samples analysed between April and December 2014. Categories with n<5 samples not included.

74

Dec

50% of samples were adulterated. Levamisole was the


adulterant most frequently detected, in 43% (23 out of
54) of samples. Other adulterants detected in cocaine
samples were phenacetin in 9% (5 out of 54), caffeine
(1sample) and lidocaine (1 sample). MDMA samples
(inboth pill and crystallised forms) showed high levels of
purity, and no adulterants or other active ingredients
were detected.

TABLE 7.2
Test results for samples analysed by the Energy Control International Drug Testing Service (1)

(12) http://energycontrol.org/noticias/528-international.html

Nov

2014

CHAPTER 7 IThe emergence of deep web marketplaces: a health perspective

Another interesting aspect is the low frequency of legal


highs in samples submitted for analysis. Although these
substances are widely offered in DWMs, demand for and
sales of these drugs are limited (Caudevilla, 2014). It is
possible that users of legal highs choose to buy them
outside DWMs, owing to their easy availability via the
surface web. An alternative explanation is that, in the
free-market conditions provided by DWMs, users prefer
established drugs to substitutes.
The data from IDTS support the hypothesis that
substance purity is much higher in DWMs than in the
global illicit drug markets. However, results from IDTS
are not necessarily representative of the market as a
whole and there are methodological biases derived from
sample selection.

drug taken from a drug test service in Spain (20102012),


Human Psychopharmacology: Clinical and Experimental,
pp.341344.

 audevilla-Glligo, F., Riba, J., Ventura, M., et al. (2014),


C
4-Bromo-2,5-dimethoxyphenethylamine (2C-B): presence in
the recreational drug market in Spain, pattern of use and
subjective effects, Journal of Psychopharmacology 26,
pp.10261035. Published online before print 9/1/2012,
doi:10.1177/0269881111431752

 ivljak, M., Stead, L.F., Hartmann-Boyce, J., Sheikh, A. and Car,


C
J. (2013), Internet-based interventions for smoking cessation,
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, doi:
10.1002/14651858.CD007078.pub4

 orns Espinosa, I., Vidal Gin, C., Caudevilla Glligo, F. and


F
Ventura Vilamala, M. (2013), Nuevas drogas de sntesis en
Espaa: legal highs (20102012), Medicina Clnica, 140,
pp.189190.

 onzlez, D., Ventura, M., Caudevilla, F., Torrens, M. and Farre,


G
M. (2013), Consumption of new psychoactive substances in a
Spanish sample of research chemical users, Human
Psychopharmacology 28, pp.332340.

 ohnson, L.A., Johnson, R.L. and Portier, R.B. (2013), Current


J
legal highs, Journal of Emergency Medicine 44, pp.1108
1115.

 jellgren, A.I., Henningsson, H. and Soussan, C. (2013),


K
Fascination and social togetherness: discussions about spice
smoking on a Swedish Internet forum, Substance Abuse 1,
pp.191198.

 efvre, F. and Simioni, A. M. (1999), Marijuana, health,


L
disease, and freedom: analysis of an Internet forum, Cadernos
de Sade Pblica 2, pp.161168.

 nsson, J. (2014), A dawning demand for a new cannabis


M
policy: a study of Swedish online drug discussions,
International Journal of Drug Policy 25, pp.673681.

 rmsby, E. (2014), The Doctor, in Silk Road, Macmillan


O
Australia, pp.183191.

 chulz, A., Stolz, T. and Berger, T. (2014), Internet-based


S
individually versus group guided self-help treatment for social
anxiety disorder: protocol of a randomized controlled trial,
BMC Psychiatry 14, p. 115.

 EDI (Transnational European Drug Information) (2014),


T
Fourth TEDI trend report, http://www.tediproject.org/uploads/
trend_reports_file_1388103418.pdf

 an Hout, M.C. and Bingham, T. (2013), Silk Road, the virtual


V
drug marketplace: a single case study of user experiences,
International Journal of Drug Policy 24, pp.385391.

I Conclusion
It seems likely that DWMs will continue to exist in the
future and that their importance will probably increase.
At the time of writing, there are at least 10 fully operative
active markets with similar characteristics to Silk Road.
DWMs are developing, and are now available using
software other than Tor, such as I2P, or as open
decentralised markets, such as OpenBazaar. DWMs
seem to be a rapidly evolving, complex phenomenon
with the potential to bring about major changes in drug
markets. This new reality requires harm reduction
strategies to be adapted if they are to successfully meet
their objectives.

I References
I

 ldridge, J. and Dcary-Htu, D. (2014), Not an eBay for


A
drugs: the cryptomarket Silk Road as a paradigm shifting
criminal innovation. Available at: http://ssrn.com/
abstract=2436643 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/
ssrn.2436643
 ndrews, G., Cuijpers, P., Craske, M.G., McEvoy, P. and Titov,
A
N. (2010), Computer therapy for the anxiety and depressive
disorders is effective, acceptable and practical health care: a
meta-analysis, PLoS One, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013196

 audevilla, F. (2014), The importance of NPS in online drug


C
markets: data from Silk Road2.0, III International Conference
on Novel Psychoactive Substances (NPS), Rome, 16/5/2014.
Available at: http://es.slideshare.net/fernandocaudevilla/
the-importance-of-new-psychoactive-34803762 (accessed
on 3/12/2015).

 audevilla, F., Ventura, M., Indave Ruiz, B.I. and Forns, I.


C
(2013), Presence and composition of cathinone derivatives in

75

CHAPTER 8

The drug trade on the deep web: a law


enforcement perspective
Joost van Slobbe

I Introduction
Cybercrime has been an issue for law enforcement
services in Europe since the early 1970s. Traditionally, a
distinction has been made between cybercrime in a
broad sense (computer-assisted crime) and cybercrime
in a narrower sense (computer-focused crime) (Furnell,
2002). The first category includes crimes in which
computers are used in the criminal process: fraud, theft
or threats over the internet, for example, but also spying,
or distributing child pornography. The second category,
cybercrime in the narrow sense, comprises crimes such
as distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks or
hacking, in which the computer or software itself is
targeted.
The category of cybercrime in a broad sense also
includes drug trafficking on cryptomarkets. There is
considerable variation in the extent to which law
enforcement services in Europe perceive the necessity
of tackling the drug trade on the deep web. The question
of how best to combat this phenomenon has not been
discussed extensively at international events.
This chapter compares the cryptomarket drug trade with
the conventional drug trade, describes how the various
law enforcement services are combating the drug trade
and assesses the effectiveness of their approach.
Finally, it indicates on the basis of these findings how the
approach to the drug trade on the dark web might look in
the future.

I The drug problem in Europe


From a law enforcement perspective, Europes drug
problem can be characterised as the trafficking and use
of cocaine, opioids (e.g. heroin), cannabis, and synthetic
drugs and new psychoactive substances. Europe is a
major destination for controlled substances and also
plays a more limited role as a transit point for drugs en

route to other regions. In addition, Europe is also a


producing region for cannabis and synthetic drugs.
Whereas virtually all the cannabis produced in Europe is
intended for local consumption, synthetic drugs
(including new psychoactive substances) are also
manufactured for export to other regions (EMCDDA,
2014).
In Europe, the law enforcement approach to drug-related
problems has traditionally focused on large-scale trading
by organised criminal groups operating at the
international level, on the one hand, and on street
dealing that causes public nuisance and health risks, on
the other. In most national drugs legislation in the
European Union, the emphasis is on the difference
between offences related to possession of drugs for
personal use and those related to the production and
trafficking of drugs.
The trade in drugs over the dark net through
cryptomarkets started in 2009 with a handful of
websites that operated quietly, such as The Drug Store
and Farmers Market (Heintz, 2012). Their successors,
such as Silk Road, were less discreet and seemed not to
regard the risk of intervention by the authorities as a
serious threat. Today, the turnover of the internet drug
trade is considerable. It has been estimated that Dutch
drug traders alone have an annual turnover of almost
EUR30million from cryptomarkets (Kooistra, 2014). It is
not surprising then, that the authorities, particularly in
Europe, the United States and Australia, feel the need to
intervene.

Similarities and differences between


actual and digital marketplaces

The business of drug trading can be subdivided into


the component processes of production, wholesale
trade, transport, intermediary trade and retail trade. In

77

The internet and drug markets

order to serve as a hub, or governal node, within this


process, an organisation must have the following four
elements at its disposal: mentalities, technologies,
resources and institutions (Burris et al., 2005). This
applies to both conventional criminal organisations
and players in the cryptomarkets, although they are
very different in nature. Where the conventional
organisations are characterised by collective attitudes
and predisposition, the cryptomarkets often pride
themselves on organisational charters of an idealistic
bent, which even allude to universal human rights and
libertarian values. The court proceedings against Ross
Ulbricht, founder of Silk Road, show a rather less
attractive picture. Ulbricht stands accused of accruing
the sum of USD60million from drug trading through
Silk Road and of subsequently laundering this money.
He is also alleged to have offered a contract killer
USD80000 to deal with one of his enemies. However,
the supposed contract killer turned out to be an
undercover officer. Unexpectedly, at the trial in
January 2015, Ulbricht tried to palm off responsibility
for managing Silk Road onto Mark Karpless, CEO of Mt
Gox, the company that owned 70% of the bitcoin
trade in 2014. In a separate court case, Karpless is
accused of disappearing USD450million worth of
bitcoins. Thus, the trade on cryptomarkets involves
not only the illicit drug trade itself, but also other
criminal behaviour characteristic of the conventional
drug trade.
The rise of internet sales, and more specifically
cryptomarkets, has entailed only limited changes to the
criminal business process. The production end of the
process whether of cocaine in South America, opiates
in countries such as Afghanistan, or MDMA and
cannabis in Western Europe has, as yet, not really
been affected by the introduction of cryptomarkets to
the chain. If a European organised criminal group wishes
to order a large consignment of heroin or cocaine in the
source country, there is face-to-face contact between
mandated representatives of the supplying and receiving
criminal organisations. The basis for this trade is trust
and creditworthiness, coupled with a ruthless system of
sanctions if the purchasing party does not keep its side
of the agreement. Numerous gangland killings occur in
Europe as a result of drug transports that have gone
wrong. Owing to these mores and the enormous
financial interests that hinge on the success of each
transaction, it is not likely that the primary negotiations
will take place over the deep web. What we do see
increasingly in European police investigations into
criminal organisations, including those involved in the
drug trade, is that communication between and within
the organisations is carried out using encrypted internet
facilities.

78

The transportation of the drugs, too, has seen few


changes at the level of wholesale consignments.
Shipping containers, air freight and couriers all remain
popular methods of transporting drugs. The customs
authorities in Western Europe and Australia do, however,
estimate from the numbers of drug shipments they have
intercepted in parcels that the use of parcel post for
transporting drugs has increased sharply as a result of
sales through cryptomarkets.
At the level of brokering, cryptomarkets increasingly
seem to be playing a role. This can be deduced from the
fact that many drugs vendors actively draw attention to
the possibility of buying large quantities from
cryptomarkets. Examples are also known from criminal
investigations in the Netherlands and other countries, of
buyers first purchasing small quantities of drugs and
then, once a degree of trust has been established
between the vendor and the purchaser, proceeding to
purchase a large consignment for trade. In one of these
cases, the purchaser drove from Scandinavia to the
Netherlands to collect the drugs from the vendor by car.
The interaction between the retail trader and the
purchaser or user does differ significantly from
conventional street dealing. In many cases, there is no
longer any face-to-face contact when the user receives
the drugs. The retailer receives an order over the dark
web and then sends off the drugs by post. His or her
activities mainly consist in checking the orders,
packaging the goods and delivering the parcel to a
carrier. The buyer receives the parcel at home or has it
delivered to a different address and collects it there.
Payment generally takes place in bitcoins. As yet,
criminal investigations have seldom, if ever, encountered
the use of another cryptocurrency. Incidentally, there has
also been a case of a buyer from the United States
ordering a whole series of synthetic drug consignments
from a supplier in the Netherlands over the dark web and
paying with cash. The money was posted in envelopes to
various addresses in the Netherlands and then collected
by the supplier. Using a cryptocurrency is an obvious way
to make payments in the drug trade over the dark web,
but it is not a prerequisite.
One important advantage of buying and selling drugs via
a cryptomarket is that the buyer and seller remain
anonymous and thus do not have to worry about
violence, extortion or robbery. Whereas the conventional
drug trade is built on power and violent force, in the
anonymous world of the deep web this is not an issue.
However, there is another side to this anonymity:
potential newcomers to these markets may feel
extremely uncomfortable about not knowing who they
are dealing with and who they are entrusting their

CHAPTER 8 IThe drug trade on the deep web: a law enforcement perspective

bitcoins or drugs to. From this point of view, street


dealing, in which drugs and money change hands
simultaneously, is easier to keep track of. A related issue
is that if a buyer or seller is duped by fraud or theft on a
cryptomarket, it is virtually impossible to call the
perpetrator to account. Another disadvantage of
anonymity is that there is always a reasonable chance
that a buyer is actually selling to an undercover police
officer.

I Differences in the key players


If we are to devise an effective European law
enforcement strategy in this area, it is important to
thoroughly understand the workings of the criminal
business process. As stated above, virtual marketplaces
where buyers and vendors meet and do business
together are an established forum, alongside the regular
marketplaces that street dealers have been using for
decades. In order to develop an effective strategy that
will enable us to influence the sale of drugs, and the
safety and security problems generated by the drug
trade, it is important to know the profiles of the key
players and what motivates them.
Let us examine the most important players within
cryptomarkets.
The administrator is the manager of the website and
determines what takes place on the site. He or she is
responsible for authorising accounts, making new
product categories, and permitting or forbidding the sale
of certain products. One of the administrators most
important tasks is to ensure effective shielding. The
administrator also fulfils the role of treasurer with regard
to cryptocurrency. If approached by the police, the
administrator is likely to take the stance that he or she
facilitates the marketplace but is not responsible for the
trade that takes place.
The moderator operates under the administrator. He or
she has limited access to the website infrastructure and
user information. The moderators most important tasks
are to answer questions from users and to scan for
fraudulent deals.
The vendor registers with a website to be permitted to
sell illegal goods through it. For this purpose, the vendor
designs a seller page to offer the goods to prospective
buyers. The vendor pays the administrator a fee of a few
hundred euros for this service. In addition, the vendor
pays the administrator a small percentage commission
on each sale.

The buyer or consumer who buys goods on a


cryptomarket can browse various seller pages to
compare products. The buyer sets up a buyer account,
free of charge, from which cryptocurrency can be
transferred. After the purchase transaction, the buyer
can indicate on the site whether the product and/or
service met expectations.
Other, less prominent, players in the field of
cryptomarkets include internet service providers, which
host cryptomarkets, and web design companies, which
may be called on to design professional cryptomarket
sites for vendors. There also seems to be a deep web
marketing organisation that offers expert marketing and
advertising services for vendors (DeepDotWeb, 2014).
Payment can take two forms. The buyer can transfer the
money owed directly to the vendor or can transfer it to
the administrator (in escrow), who then releases the sum
to the vendor once authorised by the buyer (after he or
she has received the drugs). In the case of a large
website, the sums the administrator holds in escrow can
mount up. As in the traditional criminal world, here too it
is a relatively common occurrence for third parties to
steal the money (by hacking, for example) or for
administrators to make off with the cryptocurrency
themselves.
Some users of cryptomarkets view themselves as
defending civil liberties and opposing government
meddling. The terms crypto-libertarian and cryptoanarchist are used in this context (Curran and Gibson,
2013). These users see themselves as upstanding,
law-abiding citizens who do not agree with the
criminalisation of drug use and believe it should be a
matter of individual choice. For this reason, they find it
legitimate to use crypto-techniques to evade the
meddlesome authorities. The players on the
cryptomarket go to great lengths to distinguish
themselves from the conventional drug trade. In their
communications, they emphasise their strong norms
and values to justify their actions. In this vein, several
vendors espouse harm reduction programmes and fair
trade principles. However, the big money involved is a
significant pull factor, and this market, like all trade
markets, is attractive for criminals with less noble
objectives.
One reason cryptomarkets can operate so successfully
is that they employ strict self-regulation. Both the
cryptomarket administrators and moderators ensure that
buyers and sellers comply with the rules imposed on
them. This is reinforced by the application of sanctions,
such as withdrawal of a user account.

79

The internet and drug markets

One important question that occupies police and judicial


authorities is whether the individuals who sell on the
cryptomarket fit the same profile as that of street
dealers. Have street dealers switched to the
cryptomarket, and, if so, what advantages did they
expect from this switch? Or are drug sellers on the deep
web completely different from street dealers? Do they
form a new group on the criminal market? What are the
characteristics of these people, and what are their
motives?
We can ask similar questions about the buyers. Did the
people who are now buying drugs over the deep web
previously buy drugs in the traditional way, or did they
start buying drugs because of the ease of buying them
over the deep web, which entails fewer risks? Is the
profile of these buyers similar to the profile of drugs
buyers in the traditional market? When it comes to
combating this phenomenon, and particularly in
determining priorities, it is relevant to know if there are
differences between these two types of buyers from the
point of view of problem drug use. European law
enforcement has little expertise in profiling of this kind. It
will be necessary to carry out further criminological and
other research in this area to obtain a more thorough
understanding of the phenomenon.

Strategy thus far in combating drug


trading over the deep web

From an international perspective, until now law


enforcement has focused its efforts in combating the
drug trade over the deep web on dismantling websites
that offer drugs for sale and on apprehending buyers
with a higher than average turnover. The underlying
assumption is that the website is indispensable as a
sales platform and is difficult to replace because of the
shielding requirements. The thinking is also that if the
authorities take down a website, this may remove the
anonymity of buyers and sellers, and thus make the
marketplace less attractive to use. Although parcels
containing drugs are intercepted and confiscated daily
during customs checks, criminal prosecution of sellers
has as yet been extremely limited in Europe.
The first website to sell drugs on a large scale was Silk
Road. This online black market began its operations in
February 2011. In March 2013, The Guardian counted
10000 articles for sale on Silk Road, of which an
estimated 70% were drugs. In October 2013, Silk Road
was defaced (confiscated and stamped with a law
enforcement notice), and Ross William Ulbricht was

80

arrested by the FBI as the suspected owner of the


website. During Ulbrichts trial in January 2015, the US
prosecutor estimated the total turnover of Silk Road
since it was set up at 9.5million bitcoins (the equivalent
of approximately EUR1billion). A month after Silk Road
was shut down, Silk Road2.0 was launched.
In February 2014, the Dutch police arrested five Dutch
citizens after an undercover operation, Operation
Commodore. Undercover agents managed to establish
online contact with the main suspect behind Ruud.nl
and subsequently arranged a meeting with him. The
police took down the website Black Market Reloaded
and put another website, Utopia, offline after just a week.
The German police seized servers in Bochum and
Dsseldorf. In the course of this operation, it emerged
that, in addition to his online contacts, the main suspect
also approached potential clients in the traditional
manner. In Operation Commodore, there was little sign
of the strict distinction between players on the
cryptomarkets and drugs dealers in the regular drug
trade.
On 6 November 2014, Europol reported that an
internationally coordinated police operation had taken
place, Operation Onymous, in which law enforcement
agencies all over the world worked together under the
leadership of the FBI. In Europe, the network that existed
as a result of Project ITOM (Illegal Trade on Online
Marketplaces) (Netherlands Public Prosecution Service,
2014) was used to organise this operation. Hundreds of
web domains were seized, according to Europol.
Seventeen arrests were made, in seventeen countries,
and more than a dozen black market websites were
taken down, including Silk Road2.0, Cloud9, Hydra,
Pandora, Blue Sky and Black Market. A total of 414 onion
domains were seized.
The most important objective of these interventions,
which focused on the largest cryptomarkets, was to put
specific marketplaces out of action for good and to
arrest and prosecute those responsible for drug trading.
As in the fight against conventional drug trafficking, in
tackling cryptomarkets the police attempt to confiscate
the greatest possible proportion of assets obtained in
the drug trade. In the case of Silk Road, they confiscated
26000 bitcoins, worth EUR2.5million, and in Operation
Commodore, 900 bitcoins, worth EUR400000.
Operation Onymous included takedowns of money
laundering websites such as Cash Machine, Cash Flow,
Golden Nugget and Fast Cash. The police also
confiscated USD1million in bitcoin, and USD250000
in cash.

CHAPTER 8 IThe drug trade on the deep web: a law enforcement perspective

Intended effects and actual effects of


law enforcement activities

The interventions described above were intended to


break through the aura of anonymity and the associated
sense of untouchability. In the case of illegal proceeds,
the aim of the interventions was to confiscate assets
obtained in the drug trade. With regard to
cryptocurrency, the aim was to seize large quantities of
bitcoins, thus making it less attractive to use
cryptocurrency for purchases on cryptomarkets.
It was difficult for law enforcement to foresee what
effects these interventions would have. In the
conventional drug trade, the arrest of a street dealer
usually results in a competitor moving in to take his
place. If the arrest was combined with closing the caf
the dealer operated out of, for example, the arrest might
have longer-lasting effects. If enforcement was stepped
up in the area and prevention programmes implemented,
then a long-term effect might be achieved. However,
predicting how those involved would respond to
intervention in the cryptomarkets was trickier. Would the
current actors lose faith in this system to such an extent
that cryptomarket activity would decline in favour of
street dealing? The lack of any previous experience with
this new system, combined with the absence of solid
sociological and social science data on the actors
involved, makes the effect difficult to gauge.
After the fall of Silk Road, numerous websites tried to
take over its market share, but many of these were
short-lived. Problems with site security and instances of
fraud among key players meant that the online market
was much less stable than in the Silk Road period. It is
now clear what choices buyers and sellers have when a
cryptomarket site is brought down by the authorities:
1.they move to another, existing site on an individual
basis;
2.the group of buyers and sellers set up a new
cryptomarket as soon as possible, where the same
community, or group of users, can continue to
trade; or
3. they cease buying and selling on cryptomarkets.
The combined effects of mutual dependence, the risks
involved in switching to an unknown cryptomarket, and
the pressing need to buy drugs make option2 the most
appealing.

It is no longer enough for vendors to deposit a sum of


money with the site administrator. The newer sites
require potential new vendors to be introduced by
someone the administrator already knows in order to be
admitted. The prospective sellers history on the deep
web is also considered.
Administrators have learned from the law enforcement
operations that brought down Silk Road and Silk
Road2.0. Far from the impenetrable fortress it was once
thought to be, the Tor Network has proved vulnerable.
For this reason, investments in security measures to
combat outside intervention have gone up (Van Buskirk
et al., 2014).
The intended effect of removing a large proportion of the
cryptomarkets available was not achieved, because a
whole range of new drug supply sites popped up within
no time. Even after Operation Onymous, major websites
such as Agora, Evolution and Andromeda continued their
activities. This does not mean, however, that the
operations had no effect. Trust in the cryptomarkets took
a hit, an effect that was only reinforced by the fact that
newcomers to the market are not exactly known for their
trustworthiness.

Recommendations for law


enforcement

The issue of illicit drugs is multifaceted. At the global or


even the European level, the approach to this complex
issue varies widely from place to place. There is little
disagreement on the need to tackle producers, major
dealers and middlemen. The negative effects of their
actions have such a strong impact that police
crackdowns enjoy broad support. Policy on users is
where the big differences are found. Some EU countries
consider drug users criminals, while others treat the
issue as a health problem. In the latter case, prevention,
treatment and damage control take priority over tracking
users down. Law enforcement is primarily charged with
the repressive part of the approach.
Now that cryptomarkets are becoming popular forums
for the drug trade, the question arises of whether or not
they will edge out the brokers and street dealers. From a
business perspective, a direct link between producers
and users might mean more money and less risk for
those involved.
Criminal groups that reap major profits from their
position as brokers are accustomed to using violence to

81

The internet and drug markets

defend or expand their share of the market. The risk is


that these groups will not accept their livelihood being
taken away. Ongoing investigations show that
cryptomarket sales are not limited to quantities for
personal use. One vendor, HollandBest, offers special
prices for bulk orders of more than 5000 ecstasy pills.
Another vendor, Dutchmarket, states that it is open to
negotiations on orders involving more than 500g of
cannabis, or over 1000 ecstasy pills(1).
Proponents of cryptomarkets for the drug trade claim
that their growth has nothing but advantages. The buyer
or user faces lower risks because the quality of drugs
can be better assessed through the system of feedback.
The sites provide data on each vendor, including the
number of transactions made, product quality and the
level of service provided. Vendors cannot block or edit
comments posted by buyers. The fact that vendors
strongly encourage customers to voice any complaints
directly shows that they do indeed fear the impact that
negative comments in the feedback system can have on
their business. The feedback system is not immune to
manipulation, however. Vendors cannot change
feedback posted by their buyers, but competitors are
free to post negative feedback. Furthermore, vendors
themselves can post sham feedback on deals that never
took place to boost their creditworthiness score.
Another frequently cited advantage of cryptomarket drug
deals over conventional drug dealing involves the
absence of the violence and public nuisance so endemic
to street dealing. A third common argument made by
proponents is that the drug trade on cryptomarkets does
not involve physical confrontations. This may be true, but
the illicit drug trade has considerable negative effects.
Morris (2013) indicates that the proliferation of
cryptomarkets is unlikely to reduce the most serious
forms of systemic drug crime, such as political
corruption and violence.
From a perspective of feasibility and broad-based public
support, the following approach is recommended for law
enforcement in the coming years:
nn

nn

Continue the current work of combating the main


cryptomarkets, focusing on administrators and
moderators.
Prosecute the main vendors who, judging from the
quantities ordered, operate as middlemen on
cryptomarkets.

(1) http://www.volskrant.nl/binnenland/hoe-online-coffeeshops-eenmilijoenenomzet-draaien~a3757208

82

nn

nn

nn

nn

nn

nn

Seize cryptocurrency wherever possible and


dismantle cryptocurrency facilities that make it
possible to make or receive payments for drugs.
Confiscate goods paid for with the proceeds of crime.
Invest in big data techniques, in order to link vendor
nicknames and internet activity with certain IP
addresses.
Convince internet service providers that unknowingly
host cryptomarkets to stop, by entering into public
private partnerships with ISPs. Tackle conscious
facilitators (such as bulletproof hosts) by means of
permit regulations or criminal prosecution, to ensure
that providing this service is no longer profitable.
Professionalise checks on parcel post to greatly
reduce the odds of successfully shipping drugs by
mail, a move that would hit both the conventional and
the internet drug trade.
Develop a strategy to diminish the trust of vendors
and buyers in the reliability of cryptomarkets.

In selecting a law enforcement strategy, anticipating


cryptomarket developments is key. A new challenge will
be the decentralised marketplaces. In a decentralised
set-up, no one owns the marketplace itself or is
responsible for it; instead, it is a platform that individual
vendors can use free of charge.
For libertarians with an idealised view of the
cryptomarket drug trade, one can draw a parallel with
cannabis in the Netherlands. An extremely liberal policy
towards cannabis use led to a great number of
coffeeshops springing up in the Netherlands, where,
under certain government-determined conditions,
cannabis could be sold in small quantities for personal
use. These days, the vast majority of cannabis
production has been taken over by organised crime. The
relaxed atmosphere and 1960s sentiment has made way
for contract killings, extortion, and human trafficking and
slave labour associated with cannabis production. It is
estimated that at least 85% of the cannabis grown in the
Netherlands is exported. Criminal groups that were once
active in the ecstasy trade have moved into cannabis,
have made millions in profits and consider themselves
untouchable. Outlaw motorcycle gangs such as the Hells
Angels have also managed to get their hands on a
sizeable proportion of the market. Their behaviour
undermines law-abiding society and sets a bad example
for the new generation. The innocence of the late 20th
century has vanished.

CHAPTER 8 IThe drug trade on the deep web: a law enforcement perspective

As long as the production of and trade in drugs continue


to be considered criminal acts in most of the Western
world, and as long as the proceeds remain sufficiently
high in relation to production costs to secure immense
profits, organised crime will continue to be involved in
this market. The percentage of the total drug trade
represented by cryptomarket trade is as yet too limited
to affect the profits of the larger organised criminal
groups. If cryptomarket turnover were to increase
substantially, then organised crime could be expected to
annex the marketplaces. The idea that far-reaching
security techniques would be able to prevent the
influence of organised crime strikes may be naive. Given
that criminal groups already use private servers and
protected networks for communicating within the group,
it is not inconceivable that they might move into
managing their own cryptomarkets. Those in control of
production can by waging a price war while
manipulating the payment system and competitors
feedback squeeze other suppliers out of
cryptomarkets. If the number of cryptomarket suppliers
remains at current levels, or if the popularity of this form
of drug trade declines, then the likelihood is that mafiatype criminal organisations will not consider it worth
their while to intervene. From a law enforcement
perspective, this is the most important argument for
combating the sale of drugs on cryptomarkets. That way,
we could put a stop to online criminal refuges, as well as
all the other negative fallout from conventional drug
crime in the virtual domain, with its concomitant effects
on upstanding virtual citizens.

I References
I

 urris, S., Drahos, P. and Shearing, C. (2005), Nodal


B
governance,Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 30, p. 30.

 urran, G. and Gibson, M. (2013), WikiLeaks, anarchism and


C
technologies of dissent, Antipode 45(2), pp.294314.

 eepDotWeb (2014), Updated: list of hidden marketplaces


D
(Tor & I2P), https://www.deepdotweb.com/2013/10/28/
updated-llist-of-hidden-marketplaces-tor-i2p/ (retrieved
30/5/2014).

EMCDDA (2014), European Drug Report 2014: trends and


developments, European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and
Drug Addiction, Lisbon.

 urnell, S. (2002), Cybercrime: vandalizing the information


F
society, Addison-Wesley, London.

 eintz, L. (2012), Heres the indictment that blew the lid on


H
the eBay of drug trafficking this week, Motherboard
20/4/2012. Available at: http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/
here-s-the-indictment-that-blew-the-lid-on-the-amazon-ofdrug-trafficking-this-week

 ooistra, S. (2014), Hoe Online coffeeshops een


K
miljoenenomzet draaien, in De Volkskrant, 7 September
edition. Available at htttp://www.volkskrant.nl

 orris, S. D. (2013), The impact of drug-related violence on


M
corruption in Mexico, The Latin Americanist 57(1), pp. 4364.

 etherlands Public Prosecution Service (2014), Undercover


N
investigation into illegal marketplaces on the internet,
Rotterdam.

 an Buskirk, J., Roxburgh, A., Farrell, M. and Burns, L. (2014),


V
The closure of the Silk Road: what has this meant for online
drug trading?, Addiction 109, pp.517518.

83

CHAPTER 9

How the use of the internet is


affecting drug trafficking practices
Anita Lavorgna

I Introduction
There is a consensus that the internet has expanded
possibilities for drug supply and trafficking. The aim of
this chapter is to present, from a criminological
perspective, how the use of the internet has affected the
different stages of drug trafficking (particularly the
distribution stage) in relation to different types of
recreational drugs. In particular, it will examine how the
use of the internet is affecting the modus operandi of
suppliers and their interactions with criminal peers and
clients in numerous ways. Research indicates that drug
markets have become even if to a different extent
hybrid markets that combine the traditional social and
economic opportunity structures with the new
opportunities provided by the internet. Furthermore, not
only has the internet opened the way for new criminal
actors, but it has also reconfigured relations among
suppliers, intermediaries and buyers.

I Going cyber? The state of the art


The commercialisation of the internet, like any other
technological change, modifies the environment in which
crime operates, the opportunity structures available to
criminals and the dynamics of criminal activities. An
increasing number of investigative reports underline that
the internet is a tool exploited by criminals in
transnational trafficking flows, first and foremost in drug
trafficking. Europols EU serious and organised crime
threat assessment (Europol, 2013) states that the
internet has facilitated interaction between customers
and suppliers and enabled the creation of a virtual
subculture. Similarly, reports from the EMCDDA (2014)
and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC) (2014) emphasise the growing role of the
internet and specifically of the deep web in the supply of
drugs. The EMCDDA and Europol (2013) identified
several features of online drug markets. In addition to
pointing out the existence of various hotspots in the

deep web where sellers can benefit from anonymous


communication, the report underlines that the internet
allows for different methods of payment, including virtual
currencies. It also enables buyers to review the quality of
drugs, sellers to build an online reputation and
newcomers to access information that makes their
entrance into the criminal market easier.
The use of the internet as a facilitator for drug supply and
trafficking is also receiving increasing attention from the
academic community. Over the last 15 years, the
literature on internet-facilitated drug trafficking has
highlighted the role of the internet as a facilitator of
communications in the trafficking process owing to the
enhanced possibilities for anonymity. Recent studies
underline how suppliers at different levels are using new
technologies not only to communicate through
encrypted messages (hindering the work of law
enforcement agencies), but also to deliver and distribute
their products more effectively (Walsh, 2011; Christin,
2012). Researchers have explored vendor accounts in
online marketplaces and described the possibilities that
the internet offers for operating in a high-profit and
relatively secure infrastructure (van Hout and Bingham,
2014). Potential changes to drug distribution networks
have also been discussed (Martin, 2014). In a nutshell, in
addition to facilitating the drug business, as any other
communication tool could, the internet seems to have
affected the drug market as it has other commodity
markets in a deeper way, allowing buyers and sellers
to exchange information and products very easily.
Most analyses focus on the use of the internet to reach
clients in the deep web, and more and more research is
being done on the use of cryptomarkets for trading drugs
(Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, 2014; Martin, 2014). Silk
Road, a website housed on the Tor Network and taken
down by the FBI in 2013, is the most studied online drug
marketplace (see, among others, Barratt, 2012; Christin,
2013). Although Silk Road has been described as an
eBay for drugs (Barratt, 2012), emphasising its
popularity among drug consumers making personal

85

The internet and drug markets

use-sized purchases, Aldridge and Dcary-Htu (2014)


recently found that, although in most cases drugs were
sold at prices consistent with purchases for personal
use, a meaningful proportion of sales on Silk Road were
best characterised as business-to-business and key Silk
Road customers were probably retail drug dealers
sourcing stock for local street operations (see
Chapter2). Dolliver (2015) started looking at Silk
Road2.0, another online market that was launched soon
after the Silk Road takedown (and which has recently
also been seized). Specifically, she compared the
metrics of Silk Road2.0 to those of Silk Road to
determine if there were signs of the presence of more
sophisticated drug trafficking operations in the new
marketplace. Findings, however, indicated not only that
Silk Road2.0 was smaller than the original one (with the
United States being the number one origin and
destination country for drug sales), but also that it was
not intended as a drug market only: drug items
constituted only 19% of the total percentage of active
items for sale, and, when considering the historical total
number of transactions, drugs accounted for only 1%.
However, the growing popularity of other online
marketplaces in the deep web (such as Agora, Abraxas
and Outlaw to name just a few) suggests that the
problem of the exploitation of the deep web for drug
trafficking is ongoing and has certainly not been solved
by the takedowns of the original Silk Road and Silk
Road2.0. Suffice to say that Silk Road Reloaded was
subsequently released and made accessible through the
I2P software.
The role of the surface web in drug trafficking and
particularly the ways in which the internet is exploited
throughout the trafficking chain have been seldom
considered. As a consequence, although there is general
agreement that online marketplaces for drugs have
increasingly been used over recent years and will be
used even more in the future, the extent to which the use
of the internet is reconfiguring drug trafficking overall is
still open to debate.

The internet as a facilitator: identifying


criminal opportunities and their
impact

In a recent study, the author aimed to gain an increased


understanding of how the use of the internet is
facilitating drug trafficking and the extent to which it is
changing the criminal landscape (Lavorgna, 2014). By
systematically analysing investigative cases of drug
trafficking in some EU countries and in the United

86

States, it was possible to identify nine major types of


criminal opportunity that the internet, and specifically
the surface web, provide for drug trafficking:
communicative, informational, technical, managerial,
organisational, promotional, persuasive, marketing/
loyalty-building, and countermeasure opportunities. It
was possible to observe how the use of the internet
affects all phases of the trafficking chain namely
production (cultivation of plant-based drugs and/or
production of chemicals), transit (passage through local
and/or international middlemen, criminal networks and
local retailers) and distribution (to the end-user) albeit
to different extents.
Among other findings, it was clear that, especially with
regard to the transit and distribution stages, the internet
offered the possibility of making drug trafficking less risky
by enabling several phases of the criminal activity to be
managed without interacting with anyone. Before use of
the internet became commonplace, for instance, a
criminal network had to be sophisticated and organised
enough to be able to employ large-scale corruption,
particularly in the transit and distribution phases, where
dubious operations could be spotted by law-abiding
citizens who might alert authorities. Nowadays, by
contrast, online booking and online parcel tracking
systems provide a safer way for criminals to arrange and
track the supply process and to advertise their products.
Moreover, given that for drug traders operating online it is
easier and less risky to contact potential customers in a
wide range of cyber-hotspots (that is, places where
interactions among different actors involved in drug
trafficking are facilitated) without having to meet them in
person, suppliers can take full advantage of the
anonymity that the internet provides. In this way, their
online reputation is unrelated to their identity in the
physical world. Online payment systems and virtual
currencies are used by customers to hinder police
detection and to avoid direct contact with drug dealers.
Overall, as regards communicative opportunities,
internet phone services such as Skype are heavily used
to avoid wiretapping. The internet is also used by
traffickers to set up counterstrategy measures.
Offenders generally seem to be very aware of and
cautious about taking risks while operating online. For
instance, during recent investigations it emerged that IP
addresses were verified by criminals to be sure that the
person they were interacting with online was a real
potential customer and not, for instance, an undercover
law enforcement officer (Lavorgna, 2014, 2015b).
It is worth mentioning the persuasive and marketing/
loyalty-building opportunities offered by the internet. As
explained by Lusthaus (2012), criminals operating on the

CHAPTER 9 IHow the use of the internet is affecting drug trafficking practices

internet have developed a range of mechanisms to


create and reinforce trust in their online activities. In the
case of drug trafficking, the internet is used to reassure
(potential) buyers about the anonymity and the secrecy
of the sale, and as a retention tool for both new and old
clients. For instance, membership discounts are offered
to regular buyers to increase their loyalty, and new
potential buyers are targeted by appealing to their sense
of belonging to certain social communities online
(Lavorgna, 2014, 2015a). Moreover, it should be kept in
mind that the peculiarities of cyberspace are likely to
have an impact also on users: virtuality is considered to
be a crime facilitator, since the warning signals that
might deter or frighten a young person in the real world
are minimized, and the filtering process by which an
individual moves into physical contact with a criminal
organization disappears (INCB, 2011, p.4).
To understand the effects the internet is having on drug
trafficking in more detail, however, a distinction between
cannabis and new psychoactive substances (new drugs,
in pure form or in a preparation, that are not controlled
under international drug control treaties but which may
pose a public health threat comparable to that posed by
controlled drugs), on the one hand, and drugs under
international control, on the other, is necessary.

New psychoactive substances: hidden


in plain sight

Generally speaking, although nowadays every type of


drug can be found online, the internet seems to have
boosted the market for new psychoactive substances in
particular. For these substances, which have become
more pervasive in the last few years than illicit drugs
under international control (UNODC, 2013), the internet
has become a major distribution point. As shown in
Lavorgna (2014), the use of the internet has allowed
criminals to arrange most phases of their activity directly
from the destination country, from buying substances or
chemicals online to selling the final products both in the
deep web and in the surface web under the guise of licit
products such as plant food and house deodorisers.
A major problem is that, in the case of new psychoactive
substances, it is not always easy to draw a clear line
between what is legal and what is not, given that some
substances may also have a legitimate use, and some
may even be legal in certain jurisdictions. In a context
where each EU Member State has a different national
approach to drug policies and advocates different
solutions for tackling drug problems, offenders may

exploit legal loopholes, as exemplified in what is


probably the oldest investigation, carried out in Italy in
2003, regarding internet-facilitated drug trafficking:
various types of synthetic drugs, new psychoactive
substances and chemical precursors were ordered
online from four Dutch websites and delivered to Italian
buyers by ordinary mail. In eightmonths of investigation,
about 1000 packages were intercepted at Milan post
offices, ordered by a total of 235 Italians, many of whom
were underage. The Dutch websites were adamant that
they did not have responsibility for the legal
consequences of their sales in other countries (Polizia di
Stato, n.a.).
For new psychoactive substances, the surface web plays
a major role. From a simple Google search, several
websites and forums can be identified offering
information on both offline and online places to buy
drugs, prices, how to cultivate plant-based drugs and
how to manufacture synthetic drugs. Information about
legislation and law enforcement attitudes (for instance,
whether or not it is safe to bribe agents and to what
extent restrictive legislation is enforced in a certain
country) can also be easily found (Lavorgna, 2014).
Overall, offenders do not even bother to move to the
deep web to advertise their products, as the risk of their
being caught remains minimal, given the enormity of the
environment to be controlled, and the impression is that
law enforcement operations dealing with these types of
illicit trade reach only the tip of the iceberg (Lavorgna,
2015b). The need to contact potential clients seems to
overcome the need to conceal trafficking activity where
the drug trade is in a grey area (as with new
psychoactive substances) or is perceived by a relatively
large part of the population as not socially reprehensible
(as with cannabis).

I Different patterns for controlled drugs


Regarding drugs under international control, the internet
has not affected the opportunity structure in the initial
stages of the trade substantially, probably because
producers and drug dealers generally rely on already
established opportunity structures for their businesses.
Specifically, most drug producers and dealers still rely
on their existing networks rather than on the internet to
get in contact with local middlemen and retailers. When
it comes to the trafficking of controlled drugs, therefore,
the internet is used as a facilitator, particularly for
communication and in the final phases of the trafficking
chain.

87

The internet and drug markets

Online criminal markets for hard drugs are present


particularly in the deep web. When the trade occurs
there, drugs are generally delivered via mail services,
without physical interaction between buyers and
suppliers. In addition, the surface web plays a role, with
cyber-hotspots being frequently used as an extension of
traditional hotspots: when operating in the open web to
reach potential clients, traffickers apparently prefer to
avoid using the internet to conclude the deal. For
instance, there is evidence that illicit drugs (including
cocaine, heroin and ecstasy) and prescription medicines
(mostly opioid painkillers) are sometimes advertised
under the guise of study aids or painkillers on popular
commercial websites. In these cases, the sale is
generally finalised offline, usually in public places. In
addition to creating new cyber-hotspots, use of the
internet for drug trafficking seems to also affect offline
hotspots, by moving part of the distribution chain from
city centres to suburban areas: clients do not have to
travel to purchase drugs, but can easily order them
online and have them delivered to their home by a drug
courier or by mail (for further details, see Lavorgna,
2014).
Overall, as regards drugs under international control,
cases of internet-facilitated trafficking still account for a
small minority of drug trafficking cases, and generally
criminals still seem to rely on traditional networks of
contacts to enter and manage effectively their business.
The impact of the massive use of the internet in Western
countries seems to have had a major role, especially in
relation to how criminals enter into contact with potential
clients. Although the increasing role of new technologies
in the everyday routines of all the actors involved in drug
trafficking should be kept in mind, over-emphasising the
cyber component in this criminal domain risks diverting
attention from the traditional but still prevalent
offline features of this complex criminal offence.

I Challenging rhetoric
Drug trafficking is generally framed in the organised
crime narrative: it is often associated with highly
structured criminal organisations such as the Italian
Ndrangheta, as well as with more flexible and diffuse
criminal networks such as Colombian gangs. However,
when it comes to internet-facilitated drug trafficking,
quite unexpectedly, evidence shows that individuals,
couples and very loose networks are becoming key
criminal actors thanks to the system of criminal
opportunities provided by the internet. In particular, the
use of the internet seems to have facilitated the entry
into the market of smaller criminal groups that, owing to

88

the possibility of managing almost all the phases of the


trafficking activity efficiently from afar, can organise
(almost) all stages of drug trafficking on their own, rather
than relying on complex criminal networks. Moreover, if
we consider how organised crime groups behave in
cyberspace, we have to take into consideration that
differences between the physical world and cyberspace
could prevent criminal organisations that have proven
successful in the real world being equally effective
online (Lavorgna, 2015b). Indeed, the use of the internet
has simplified the trafficking chain by reducing the
organisational layers that are necessary: for instance,
drugs ordered online are now delivered via mail,
eliminating the need to rely on members of the criminal
network. This is true especially when looser groups
operate in areas where there is not a strong presence of
endogenous sophisticated criminal networks already
involved in the trafficking business.
At least potentially, in cyberspace criminal behaviour
cuts across a wide spectrum of society (Jaishankar,
2009, p.289); in fact, offenders ages and skill levels can
be very difficult to determine, and most average people
could hypothetically join a criminal group or start a
criminal career on their own. Moreover, because of the
so-called online disinhibition effect (Suler, 2004),
people in cyberspace behave with less restraint than in
the physical world. It has been hypothesised that there is
a risk of amateurisation of drug-related crime, meaning
that ordinary people (both users and potential drug
chemists) without specific criminal contacts can easily
locate drug suppliers (INCB, 2011) and therefore enter
the criminal market. Although there is not enough
evidence to support this claim, recent research points in
this direction. For instance, as regards recent
marketplaces such as Silk Road2.0, Dollivers analysis
(2015) suggests that only a small minority of vendors
had connections with more sophisticated criminal
groups or upper-level retailers and that the majority were
opportunistic vendors. However, it is worth noting that,
even when internet-related criminal opportunities allow
drug trafficking to become an individual business, this
criminal activity is generally carried out by professional
offenders, full-timers for whom the trafficking activity is
their main source of income (Lavorgna, 2014). The
potential to reach a larger customer base via the internet
could also precipitate greater involvement of occasional
drug dealers, who might become professionals.
Although many internet opportunities are exploited by
looser gangs, couples and even individuals in the
surface web, where more structured organised crime
groups are involved there is greater use of the deep web.
Since monitoring of and investigations into the deep web
started only very recently, it is difficult to draw clear

CHAPTER 9 IHow the use of the internet is affecting drug trafficking practices

conclusions in this regard, but this appears to be at least


a preliminary trend deserving more scholarly attention
(see, for instance, Martin, 2014).

I The need for proactive online policing


As increasing use of the internet has allowed new
criminal opportunities for drug suppliers, it has also
significantly affected their vulnerabilities, giving law
enforcement new tools for monitoring and investigating
criminal markets for drugs. However, contemporary law
enforcement and regulatory agencies still seem to lack
the capacity to significantly control internet-facilitated
drug trafficking. Apart from a few notable exceptions of
best practices carried out in some countries by certain
proactive units, online investigation of trafficking
activities is not yet a tool commonly used by law
enforcement, with specific protocols still to be
developed (Lavorgna, 2014, 2015b). Moreover, existing
legal frameworks still do not explicitly address the
numerous and substantial procedural problems caused
by use of the internet and they often do not offer enough
room for manoeuvre or clear directives for law
enforcement bodies operating on the internet (for
instance, in many countries officers do not have the legal
means to operate as online undercover officers, which
limits their operative capacities). It is easy to see how
these issues hinder investigations while offering a
considerable advantage to offenders. It is advisable that
the use of online investigations in drug trafficking cases
become embedded in the routine practices of law
enforcement agencies in all countries and at all levels.

I Conclusion
Drug trafficking patterns are constantly changing.
Identifying patterns of criminal behaviour and matching
them to different cyber-hotspots could have important
implications for tackling offenders and potential
offenders in the internet age. In this way, it would be
possible to manipulate the opportunity structures they
exploit, to help law enforcement make the most of its
(scarce) resources in monitoring and protecting the
internet, and to help consumers make responsible
choices when buying items online, while keeping to a
minimum interventions that could jeopardise internet
freedom and the open internet agenda. If we consider
cyberspace an expansion of the physical social space
where crime might happen, as in the physical world we
can find crime concentrations online (cyber-hotspots,
hot products, etc.). More criminological research is

therefore needed to take into consideration


transformations in technology, society and crime caused
by the internet, and to allow new preventative thinking on
reducing criminal opportunities in cyberspace. A genuine
and trusting partnership between the academic world,
relevant public institutions and law enforcement is
necessary to tackle the new challenges of drug
trafficking in an effective way.

I References
I

 ldridge, J. and Dcary-Htu, D. (2014), Not an eBay for


A
drugs: the cryptomarket Silk Road as a paradigm shifting
criminal innovation. Available at: http://ssrn.com/
abstract=2436643 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/
ssrn.2436643

 arratt, M.J. (2012), Silk Road: eBay for drugs, Addiction 107,
B
pp. 683684.

 hristin, N. (2013), Traveling the Silk Road: a measurement


C
analysis of a large anonymous online marketplace, WWW
2013, International World Wide Web Conference Committee
(IW3C2), Rio de Janeiro, preliminary version revised in
November 2012. Available at: https://www.cylab.cmu.edu/
files/pdfs/tech_reports/CMUCyLab12018.pdf

 olliver, D.S. (2015), Evaluating drug trafficking on the Tor


D
Network: Silk Road2.0, the sequel, International Journal of
Drug Policy. Available at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/
science/article/pii/S0955395915000110

EMCDDA (2014), European drug report: trends and


development, European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug
Addiction, Publications Office of the European Union,
Luxembourg.

 MCDDA and Europol (2013), EU drug market report: a


E
strategic analysis, Publications Office of the European Union,
Luxembourg.

Europol (2013), EU serious and organized crime threat


assessment (SOCTA), European Police Office, The Hague.

INCB (2011), Report of the International Narcotics Control


Board for 2010: annual report of the International Narcotics
Control Board, United Nations, New York.

 aishankar, K. (2009), Space transition theory of cyber


J
crimes, in Schmallager, F. and Pittaro, M. (eds), Crimes of the
Internet, Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.

 avorgna, A. (2014), Internet-mediated drug trafficking:


L
towards a better understanding of new criminal dynamics,
Trends in Organized Crime 17(4), pp. 250270.

 avorgna, A. (2015a), The online trade in counterfeit


L
pharmaceuticals: new criminal opportunities, trends, and
challenges, The European Journal of Criminology 12,
pp.226241.

89

The internet and drug markets

90

 avorgna, A. (2015b), Organised crime goes online: realities


L
and challenges, Journal of Money Laundering Control 18(2),
pp. 153168.

 usthaus, J. (2012), Trust in the world of cybercrime, Global


L
Crime 13(2), pp. 7194.

 artin, J. (2014), Lost on the Silk Road: online drug


M
distribution and the cryptomarket, Criminology and Criminal
Justice 14(3), pp. 351367.

 olizia Di Stato (n.a.) Droga su Internet: maxi-operazione della


P
Polizia. Available at: http://www.poliziadistato.it/
articolo/12255-Droga_su_Internet_maxi_operazione_della_
Polizia/

 uler, J. (2004), The online disinhibition effect,


S
CyberPsychology and Behavior 7(3), pp. 321326.

I
I
I

UNODC (2013), World drug report, United Nations, New York.

 alsh, C. (2011), Drugs, the Internet and change, Journal of


W
Psychoactive Drugs 43, pp. 5563.

UNODC (2014), World drug report, United Nations, New York.


 an Hout, M.C. and Bingham, T. (2014), Responsible vendors,
V
intelligent consumers: Silk Road, the online revolution in drug
trading, International Journal of Drug Policy 25(2), pp.
183189.

III

SECTION III

Surface web markets


and social media

CHAPTER 10

A method for exploring the number of online


shops selling new psychoactive substances:
initial I-TREND project results
CHAPTER 11

Online supply of medicines to illicit drug markets:


situation and responses
CHAPTER 12

Social media and drug markets


93

I Overview
This section of the Insights includes three chapters which individually and
from different perspectives explore virtual and online drug-related markets
that operate primarily on the surface or clear web. The first two chapters
examine the online supply of medicines and NPS, substances which in
offline drug markets are increasingly supplied and used alongside
established illicit drugs. What is less clear, however, is the extent to which
the internet, particularly online pharmacies and legal high shops, represent
a significant source of supply of these products when they are found on the
illicit market.
Chapter 10 addresses the burgeoning online market for the sale and
distribution of NPS, including legal highs and research chemicals, which
has developed over the last decade. Magali Martinez and Daniela
Kmetonyov, describe the methodology used and the crawling software
that has been developed for monitoring this market by researchers in five
European countries participating in the I-Trend project. They present
preliminary results on server locations and provide a typology of online
shops based on the products sold as well as describing marketing
practices based on their ethnographic research.
In Chapter 11, Lynda Scammell and Alessandra Bo present what is
currently known about the illicit online sale of medicinal products via online
pharmacies, their possible role as a source for products such as
benzodiazepines and opioids to supply illicit drug markets, and the
responses implemented in Europe and internationally to tackle this
problem.
Chapter 12 addresses the role played by social media and apps in online
and virtual drug markets. Danica Thanki and Brian Frederick suggest that
social media generally has an indirect role in relation to the supply and sale
of drugs. Most sites and apps appear to be primarily used to communicate
about drugs discuss, share opinions and experiences as well as to
make arrangements to meet up to use them. The use of location-based
apps, web cams and discussion forums is presented, as are the range of
potential responses to problems linked with drugs and social media
including interventions implemented by policymakers and law enforcement.
95

10

CHAPTER 10

A method for exploring the number of


online shops selling new psychoactive
substances: initial I-TREND project
results
Magali Martinez (Observatoire Franais des Drogues et des
Toxicomanies OFDT), Daniela Kmetonyov (Charles University in
Prague CUNI), Vendula Blkov CUNI(1)

I Introduction1
Since the late 2000s, new psychoactive substances (NPS)
have attracted the attention of decision-makers, and
several studies have explored the online supply of NPS
through shops on the internet (Hillebrand et al., 2010;
Schmidt et al., 2011; Bruno et al., 2013). For example, the
Psychonaut2002 project devised a methodology using
search engine queries to identify websites with drugrelated content, including those offering to supply
psychoactive substances (Schifano et al., 2006). The
methodology used in this study was labelled snapshot,
because it produced a time-specific picture of the existing
websites, which can rapidly change. The methodology was
further developed by the EMCDDA to gather information
about online sales of NPS, and a study was carried out at
European level (EMCDDA, 2011a). In addition to providing
a quantitative and qualitative assessment of the online
supply of NPS, studies also revealed the need for more
information on how online markets are structured and for
continuous monitoring over time.
Building on these earlier studies, the European
Commission-funded the I-TREND (Internet Tools for
Research in Europe on New Drugs) project(2) aimed,
among other things, to develop a software-automated
tool for monitoring online shops using a less resource
intensive method than had been available previously.
(1) And all those involved in this part of the I-TREND project: Martin
Paitn (CUNI), Agns Cadet-Tarou (OFDT), Amanda Atkinson (Liverpool
John Moores University (LJMU)), Daan Van der Gouwe (Trimbos Institute),
Damien Sainte-Croix (OFDT), Emma Begley (LJMU), Micha Kidawa
(University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Warsaw), Tibor Brunt
(Trimbos Institute).
(2) European project JUST/2012/DPIP/AG/3641 co-financed by the Drug
Prevention and Information Programme of the European Union.

This chapter focuses on the new methodology used to


monitor online NPS shops and their characteristics. It
contains a description of the semi-automated tools
designed for this purpose, which aimed to (i) minimise
the human input and maximise the automation of the
data-gathering process (ii), allow periodical rather than
one-off monitoring and (iii) gather more extensive data
than had previously been collected on online shops and
their popularity.

I Overview of the I-TREND project and


its workstream

The overall objective of the I-TREND project, which


involved researchers from five European countries(3),
was to help prevent health and social harms linked to
NPS and to inform the response to the emerging risks.
The principal activities of the project were monitoring
online user forums and online shops, conducting an
online survey targeting users of NPS, the analysis of
samples and the exchange of reference standards
among laboratories, and the production of a top list of
NPS at national level and of technical folders informed
by the project activities. The study comprised five
different but interconnected project workstreams, each
complementing the others (Figure10.1) and, to an
extent, influencing one anothers methodology.

(3) Department of Addictology, First Faculty of Medicine, CUNI and


General University Hospital, Prague, the Czech Republic; OFDT,
Saint-Denis, France; Centre for Public Health, LJMU, United Kingdom;
Trimbos Institute, Utrecht, the Netherlands; SWPS, Warsaw, Poland.

97

The internet and drug markets

FIGURE 10.1
I-TREND project workstream
Workstream 1
Qualitative work on
User Forums

Workstream 4
Chemical analysis
done on samples
bought on internet

Workstream 5
TOP LISTS
Technical folders

Workstream 2
Quantitative and
qualitative works on
the online offer

Workstream 3
Online survey

I I-TREND methodology
Each project partner established a list of the substances
considered to be used most frequently in their country (a
top list) based on Reitox data sources; customs and/or
police seizures; toxicovigilance indicators
(hospitalisations and deaths); and general population
survey results. Each partner could complement these
sources with country-specific data, such as results on
chemical analyses performed as part of national
psychoactive substance investigation measures (Brunt
and Van Den Brink, 2012; Lahaie and Cadet-Tarou,
2012) or specific surveys. The substances included in
the top list guided the implementation of other activities
(i.e. for the snapshot, the core search terms were the
substances included in the top list for the relevant
country).
In addition to around 10 chemical names of substances
selected per country, some commercial names (socalled branded products) were also included.
The online market for NPS consists of different segments
targeting different user profiles (Lahaie et al., 2013). The
so-called branded segment is that which offers branded
products, with sophisticated packaging, in powder form
and also as tablets or herbs. It aims to attract young
people, who may be inexperienced and ill-informed
about what they are consuming. By contrast, the
informed segment aims to reach experienced users,
who have more knowledge about different types of NPS,
their effects and dosages. In this segment, NPS are
mostly referred to by their chemical names and by their
chemical structure, and are often described as research
chemicals.

98

Monitoring online shops: a semiautomated software tool

A key aim of the project was to design computational


tools to enable regular monitoring of NPS being offered
for sale on the internet; these tools were to have the
capacity to collect more data in a less time-consuming
manner than had been possible in previous snapshot
surveys.
The work comprised two main phases in establishing the
semi-automated scraping process: first, development of
SoftwareI, Shop Finder, then development of
SoftwareII, Product Scraper. Both of these phases had
three stages: developing the computational tool, setting
it with national terms and testing it within a time period.
The Shop Finder was used from September 2013 until
the end of the project and the Product Scraper was
used only between January and April 2015.
Shop Finder had a number of roles, including running the
snapshot, categorising the search outcomes and feeding
the selected information about shops into an online
database on a regular basis. This, in practice, meant that
a collaborative online platform was created allowing the
partners to indicate for the whole period of the project
country-specific search phrases and search engines (e.g.
google.nl, yahoo.nl). After the launch of the software at
the first snapshot, a manual classification had to be
carried out on all of the results in order to separate
relevant from non-relevant results. However, for the
subsequent snapshots, the already classified sites
automatically fell into the categories previously assigned
to them even if the websites in question had
temporarily closed and reopened. Only new sites have to
be manually classified, which is the key advantage of this
process: time-consuming classification has to be done
only once, at the beginning, whereas previous
methodologies required a manual analysis of all results
each time.
The software then automatically collects structural
information(4) for all relevant online shops periodically.
The report, with up-to-date information, is available
online for users to download and for further analysis.
Manual sifting is then required to remove duplicate web
shops, as this process cannot yet be automated.

(4) Structural information provides details about the physical identity of


the site and its owner, as well as statistics about visit frequency for the
site (e.g. the URL of the website, the sites IP address and its country of
origin, the contact information of the domain owner and the
corresponding country, the domain registration date). These data were
provided using sites specialising in analysing global internet traffic: whois.
com, websiteoutlook.com, alexa.com and websitetrafficspy.com.

CHAPTER 10 IA method for exploring the number of online shops selling new psychoactive substances

FIGURE 10.2
Flowchart Software I, Shop Finder
Flowchart Software I, Shop Finder

Initial snapshot Testing

Following snapshots

Building software and platform

Setting it with national terms


(Top Lists, search engines )

Snapshot (Software)
First 100 results by search
phrases
n=25 700 (number of
searches)

Snapshot (Software)

1st round of categorisation


(Manual)
Manual check of all results and
divide relevant results from
the rest.
Number of relevant web shops
on May 2014 n=112 (FR), n=27
(NL), n=103 (PL), n=309 (UK),
n=33 (CZ).

1st round of categorisation


(Software)

Structural information
collection (Software)
For all relevant e-shops
identified, software
automatically gets structural
information on a regular basis.
Report available online.

First 100 results by search


phrases
n=25 700 (number of
searches)

Manual check only of the new


results and classification.
Number of new relevant web
shops on November 2014:
n=10 (FR), n=0 (NL), n=16
(PL), n=66 (UK), n=4 (CZ).

Structural information
collection (Software)

For all relevant e-shops


identified, software
automatically gets structural
information on a regular basis.
Report available online.

2nd round of categorisation


(Manual)

2nd round of categorisation


(Manual)

Manual check of all the


relevant results, removal of
duplicate/inactive websites
and categorisation according
to type of duplicity.
Number of inactive web shops
on May 2014 n=16 (FR), n=5
(NL), n=17 (PL), n=65 (UK),
n=3 (CZ).
Number of duplicate web
shops on 26/5/2014: n=33
(FR), n=3 (NL), n=15 (PL),
n=35 (UK), n=0 (CZ).

Manual check of all the


relevant results, removal of
duplicate/inactive websites
and categorisation according
to type of duplicity.
Number of inactive and
duplicate web shops on
November 2014:
n = n/a (data not analysed
at the time of writing).

The most popular online shops were then identified


among all the unique shops and selected for further
analysis using SoftwareII.
Product Scraper was developed in order to monitor
prices and other characteristics of products marketed in
those online shops. At the time of writing, only the
outcomes from Software I were available; SoftwareII
was still in the testing phase.

I Search phrases and query frequencies


SoftwareI is designed to search the chosen national
and international search engines once a week with the
substances selected plus the term purchase in
the language of origin of each partner country
(Table10.1). The most popular search engines in the
relevant country were used (Table10.2) and there was
a mean of approximately 12 search terms per partner.
Names of substances and branded products were
tested with different synonyms and spellings (e.g.
NRG-3 can also be written as NRG3 or NRG 3, etc.).
Generic expressions (e.g. party pills) were added in
case they returned a substantial number of relevant
results.
Only web shops in the national language of the partner
country in question were considered relevant results.
There were exceptions where appropriate, for example
for the Netherlands, where the majority of the population
speaks English. In the United Kingdom, all sites in
English were taken as relevant, although, in reality, some
of these sites may target not the United Kingdom but
other English-speaking countries.

I Classification of search results


The first 100 results for each search phrase are tracked
by the software. This means, that for one search phrase
and three search engines, the software tracks 300
results. In the case of duplicate results(5) the software
takes only one into account. At this stage, human input is
required in order to separate relevant results from the
rest. This activity is not connected to the software
schedule; however, it is better to check the results on a
regular basis in order to get structural information on
newly identified web shops as soon as possible.
During this process, the results are classified into three
subcategories:
nn

e-shops all online shops selling NPS;

nn

fora(6) online fora with NPS-related topics;

nn

small ads websites where individuals or


professionals post ads offering NPS for sale;

(5) Duplicate results refers to websites that have the same URL and
were found by different search engines.
(6) The term fora was taken in its broadest sense, designating all
websites where supposedly there were no NPS sales, but rather
information on these substances and written discussions between
people (e.g. comment threads).

99

The internet and drug markets

TABLE 10.1
Substances and search terms used for the first snapshot
Czech Republic

France

Netherlands

Poland

United Kingdom

3-MMC koupit

AM-2201 acheter

25-I NBOME kopen

3,4-DMMC sklep

4-MEC buy

4-FA koupit

UR-144 acheter

4-FA kopen

3-MMC sklep

5 APB buy

4-MEC koupit

MDPV acheter

4-FMP kopen

AM-2201 sklep

5 meo dalt buy

6-APB koupit

4-MEC acheter

4-MEC kopen

Brefedron sklep

6 apb buy

AMT koupit

25-I NBOME acheter

5-APB kopen

Etkatynon sklep

AKB48 buy

bk-MDMA koupit

5-MEO-DALT acheter

5-IT kopen

MDPBP sklep

AM-2201 buy

MDPBP koupit

6-APB acheter

5-MEO-DALT kopen

Mefedron sklep

ur-144 buy

methoxetamine koupit

5-APB acheter

6-APB kopen

Pentedron sklep

Ethylphenidate buy

ethcathinone koupit

Ethylphenidate acheter

aMT kopen

UR-144 sklep

MPA buy

MPPP koupit

Methoxetamine acheter

Benzo Fury kopen

pMPPP sklep

Pentadrone buy

Funky koupit

NRG3 acheter

Flava kopen

alfa-PVP sklep

Phenazepam buy

Cherry Cocolino koupit

3-MMC acheter

Flux kopen

6-apb sklep

PMA buy

Ethylphenidate koupit

Happy caps acheter

MDPV kopen

metoksetamina sklep

2-AI buy

MPA koupit

Party pills acheter

MXE kopen

funky sklep

5-EAPB buy

Wlodziu koupit

Bong bastic acheter

3-MMC kopen

mocarz sklep

Methoxphendine buy

Ex koupit

sztywny misza sklep

Etizolam buy

El Magico koupit

kokolino sklep

methalone buy

DMX koupit

wodziu sklep

mdai buy

Pentedrone koupit

dopalacze sklep internetowy

amt buy

nn

inadequate( 7 ) irrelevant results.

nn

Before further categorisation of the validated online


shops, the main automatically collected structural
information(8) is manually checked to identify any
duplicates (Figure10.2, step6, and Table10.3).
After removing all duplicates, unique online shops are
manually classified according to four different categories
depending on the range of products offered. They are
classified as:
nn

nn

research chemical shops if the substances are


displayed mostly with their chemical names, often
with an image of their chemical structure;
commercial/branded shops if the substances are
mainly displayed with their trade names;

nn

herbal shops if the site offers primarily plant-related


substances as well as commercial products;
other if the sites offer products relating to sexual
performance, health or general wellness.

These four categories aimed to differentiate sites aimed at


informed users from those intended for a wider public, and
also to determine the relative importance of each category.

I Multi-criteria classification of the popularity of


online shops

For relevant online shops categorised as unique shops,


a further analysis was undertaken to select the most
popular online shops. The purpose of this was (i) so that
these popular online shops could be scraped with

TABLE10.2
Search engines used by partner countries
Czech Republic

France

Netherlands

Poland

United Kingdom

Google.cz

Google.fr

Google.nl

Google.pl

Google.com

Seznam.cz

Bing.fr

Yahoo.nl

Bing.com

Bing.com

Centrum.cz

Yahoo.fr

Vvinden.nl

Yahoo.com

Bing.nl

( 7 ) For example, the abbreviation MMC, in addition to referring to a drug,


can be used to refer to the thickness of protective gear for sporting
activities, as well as having other meanings.
(8) The sites IP country of origin, the contact information of the domain
owner and the corresponding country, the domain registration date and five
indicators on popularity from www.alexa.com. Since IP addresses are legally
considered personal data, they were encrypted and stored on secure media.

100

CHAPTER 10 IA method for exploring the number of online shops selling new psychoactive substances

TABLE 10.3
Comparison of online shops collected between November 2013 and May 2014 and their status in May 2014(1)
Czech Republic

France

Netherlands

Poland

United Kingdom

Number of shops identified between


November 2013 and May 2014

33

112

27

103

309

Number of active shops remaining in


May 2014

30

96

22

86

244

Number of active shops remaining in


May 2014 with duplicates removed

30

64

19

72

207

(1) New online shops collected in November 2014 have not been included in this table.

SoftwareII and (ii) so that test purchases could be made


from these sites.

For this purpose, nine additional categories of


automatically collected structural information were
used(9). Among them, five were given special
consideration(10), but the global index ranking given by a
website specialising in the supply of commercial web
traffic data(11) was primarily used. To a certain extent,
this index is a summary of other information on
popularity and, unlike the other popularity indicators, it
was available for most of the websites. In addition to
these data, other criteria were used to rank the
popularity of online shops, such as whether or not the
site had been captured by the previous EMCDDA
snapshot. In addition, the quality of the translation of the
site was taken into account. For example, a real
translation, and not an automatic one, was considered to
constitute an effort by the site operator to make the site
more accessible to users in the target country.

To improve their visibility, some sites deliberately create


duplicates (Schmidt et al., 2011). These so-called
spamdexing practices move the site in question up the list
of results displayed by search engines. By using and
cross-checking more structural information from up-todate snapshot surveys, a more precise estimation of the
number of site operators can be achieved. For instance,
the project found that it is not possible to identify all
duplicates only on the basis of visual information available
on the website, such as the URL. This suggests that sites
may use rough spamdexing practices and also
sophisticated means to increase their visibility. The
structural information drawn from active online shops
(total: 478) established that 18% (86) of active websites
were duplicate sites (Table10.3 and Figure10.3).
Consequently, previous studies may have over-estimated
the number of online shops.

Preliminary findings from the


monitoring of online shops

A total of 584 online shops were found by the project


partners, with 15% (88 shops) found identically for
multiple countries. The data were gathered between
5November2013 and 26May2014. Of the 584
identified shops, 18% (106 shops) were no longer active
at the end of the monitoring period on 26May2014
(Table10.3).

Elimination of duplicates and exploring


configuration

The proportion of duplicates varies by country; for


example, France has the biggest number of duplicates
(33%), where the biggest proportion is made up of
identical web pages. The Netherlands, Poland and the
United Kingdom have approximately the same portion
of duplicates ranging from 14 to 16%. The Czech
Republic stands out for its lack of site duplication. It
may be that, as the number of online shops identified
for this country is small, duplicate retailers are less
likely to be observed.

(9) The daily revenue generated by the small ads on the site, the number
of daily and monthly views of the pages, the global popularity ranking of
the website, the number of external links bringing web users to the site,
the number of monthly users, etc.
(10) The global index ranking on search engines, the number of monthly
visitors, the number of monthly page views, the number of daily page
views, the daily revenue generated by the small ads on the site.
(11) www.alexa.com

101

The internet and drug markets

FIGURE 10.3
Breakdown of active online shops by status in May 2014
same IP, identical, parallel, redirected, unique
%
100
90

21

80

12
3

4
10

FIGURE 10.4
Breakdown of active online shops by IP location in
May2014
%
100

5
7

70
60

5
5
5

other countries, there is no tradition of smart, herbal or


head shops, or even of smoking paraphernalia shops.

90

100

21

24

67

40

86

84

85

70
60

30
50
20

15

19

16

29

80

50

15

24

18

11
6
3
6

40

10

38

30

0
Czech
Republic

France

Unique

Netherlands

Redirected

Poland

Parallel

United
Kingdom
Identical

Unique

Online shops with a unique design and IP address

Redirected

Online shops redirecting to another online shop


already in the category Unique

Parallel

Online shops with the same graphic design as


but a different URL and IP address from an
existing shop in Unique

Identical

Online shops with the same IP address and


graphic design as but a different URL from an
existing shop in Unique

I National breakdown of supply in a global market


The geographical information about sales sites (e.g.
physical location of the sales team, site of the server)
can refer to several countries at a time (EMCDDA, 2011).
However, building internet search phrases from those
substances most frequently present in a particular
country can facilitate the understanding of the
information collected in the context of national demand.

20

52

42

10

11

0
Czech
Republic

44

48

France

4
Netherlands

Czech Republic

Germany

United Kingdom

United States

14

6
8

Poland

United
Kingdom

Netherlands

Poland

Other

I Typology of online shops


The breakdown by site type differs from one surveyed
country to another (Figure10.5). The most popular web
shops seem to be RC shops for all countries, although
the Czech Republic and France have the same or similar
numbers of RC shops and herbal shops. In France, in
fact, there is an even distribution between the three
main categories of online shops.
FIGURE 10.5
Types of online shops
%
100

The unique sales sites intended for the Czech, Dutch and
Polish markets are more likely to be locally based (CZ,
42%; NL, 52%; PL, 48%) than those intended for, for
example, France, where sites are often located in the
Netherlands (38%) and the United States (24%). This is
also the case for the United Kingdom (44% located in
the United States)(12). This point is consistent with the
breakdown of web shops by IP location (Figure10.4).
For France, the servers for the sales sites taken into
account are generally outside French territory and often in
non-French-speaking countries. This observation may be
explained by the fact that, in this country, unlike the four

(12) Breakdown based on the country location of the IP address of the


server hosting the online shop.

102

4
7

80

11

90
43

33

70

63

60

76

82

50
28

40
30

43

11

20
10
0

28

26

13
Czech
Republic
Commercial/
Branded shops

France

Netherlands
Herbal shops

17

19

Poland

United
Kingdom

Research
Chemical
shops

Other

CHAPTER 10 IA method for exploring the number of online shops selling new psychoactive substances

I Discussion

I Conclusion

The collection of quantitative data and qualitative


information, using a convergent-parallel model
(Condomines and Hennequin, 2014), allows a more
meaningful analysis of the online market. At the
beginning of the commercial NPS phenomenon, the
market could have been seen as an open scene, where
retailers were operating in plain sight (Power, 2013). It
has, however, become more fragmented and there are
different levels of visibility. Between public, private and
underground spaces, some sales take place in interstices,
between light and shadow. Suppliers use two types of
strategies: either maximum internet visibility or a
discreet, targeted presence. As they act as companies,
they try to be more visible than their competitors, but at
the same time, some of them prefer to maintain
anonymity and offer specialised supply in spaces
undetectable by snapshots. They organise the digital
space with gateways, a sort of grey zone, between the
surface web and the deep web.

During the period of the study, the semi-automated tool


enabled us to follow the evolution of a number of online
shops offering NPS for sale. It reinforces the existing
picture of a market that is extremely dynamic and
characterised by the closing and opening of new sites.
The study shows the need to take duplicate sites into
consideration to understand the reality of online supply.
The collection and analysis of structural data illustrated
the variety of techniques used by retailers to increase
their visibility. The data also show notable differences
between countries with respect to IP address location
and types of site. The NPS phenomenon shows national
variation, and continuous monitoring, plus greater efforts
to take corresponding national markets into
consideration, could help increase our understanding of
how the online supply, targeting individual countries, is
structured.

Some online shops try to improve their visibility through


spamdexing practices, which helps them to appear at
the top of search engine results. In this way they are
accessible to the largest possible population, even by
people who are not accustomed to using the internet or
who have no experience with drugs. At the same time,
the qualitative study of user forums indicates that some
site operators employ camouflage strategies. Not all
websites on the surface internet are detectable by
search engines or indeed by the snapshot methodology.
Some sites remain invisible either by not using any
keywords in their content or by designing their websites
so that one part is not accessible on the internet.
The use of codenames to mask the sale of substances is
a well-known practice; however, the practice of using
legal products to create a diversion is not so well
documented. The sites may display only legal products
(such as catnip, car maintenance products or laboratory
equipment), without mentioning that they can be used
for recreational purposes (Giannasi et al., 2012). One
finding is that, particularly in such cases, and even when
online shops advertise NPS sales on their front page, the
sites often dont allow access to their product catalogue,
or they restrict the visibility and accessibility of certain
substances. NPS are visible only after a user is invited by
a person who is already a site customer. The invitation
takes the form of a guest code or a URL (e.g. for the deep
web). In such cases, the online shop is hardly visible or
invisible using the snapshot method.

Although the process as a whole still requires a large


amount of manual input, the main improvement is a
reduction in the time needed to run the snapshot and
create a preliminary list of online sites to approximately
twodays. These results could not have been obtained
without the implementation of specific technical tools
that did not previously exist on the e-reputation software
market(13). The automation of data collection (including
structural information, their indexation, and the
establishment of an iterative system that documents a
database at each loop) allow, researchers and
institutions to take over the snapshot methodology.
Whereas it has been used for one-off tasks, it can be
now used for continuous monitoring.
The choice of substances used to establish the list of
queries is the main limitation of this study, because the
results of the snapshot depend on it. In particular, the
choice of trade names is more difficult because there are
many and, unlike the chemical names of the substances,
they are not systematically reported by the Reitox data
sources (e.g. customs seizures, health alerts).
Nevertheless, taking them into account remains
essential because this maintains the link between retail
and supply.
Finally, part of the online supply of NPS on the surface
web takes place in a grey area that cannot be
quantitatively monitored, and there may, therefore, be a
difference between measuring NPS accessibility and
measuring NPS availability. Sites that are completely
(13) E-reputation software performs surveillance of a given subject by
cross-checking information automatically collected on sites that pertain
to the subject (blogs, forms, media) and the reactions of internet users on
these same sites or on related social networks.

103

The internet and drug markets

invisible on the surface web cannot be found using the


snapshot methodology. Such an observation of the
online NPS supply can only be made if some of the
supply and demand remains on the surface web in
visible spaces. As a result of the regulations and
legislation that Member States adopt, both with respect
to NPS (European Commission, 2013) and internet
functioning, the balloon effect(14) may lead to the NPS
online market becoming increasingly less visible and
more difficult to monitor.

I References
I
I

 runo, R., Poesiat, R. and Matthews, A. J. (2013), Monitoring


B
the Internet for emerging psychoactive substances available
to Australia, Drug and Alcohol Review 32(5), pp. 541544.

 iannasi, P., Pazos, D., Esseiva, P. and Rossy, Q. (2012),


G
Dtection et analyse des sites de vente de GBL sur Internet :
perspectives en matire de renseignement criminel, Revue
Internationale de Criminologie et de Police Technique et
Scientifique 65(4), pp. 468479.

 illebrand, J., Olszewski, D. and Sedefov, R. (2010), Legal


H
highs on the Internet, Substance Use and Misuse 45(3), pp.
330340.

 ahaie, E. and Cadet-Tarou, A. (2012), France early


L
warning system, Early warning system national profiles,
Office of the European Union, Luxembourg, pp. 5357.

 ahaie, E., Martinez, M. and Cadet-Tarou, A. (2013), New


L
psychoactive substances and the Internet: current situations
and issues, Tendances 84, OFDT, Paris.

 ower, M. (2013), Drugs 2.0: The web revolution thats


P
changing how the world gets high, Portobello Books, London.

 chifano, F., Deluca, P., Baldacchion, A., et al. (2006), Drugs


S
on the web; the Psychonaut 2002 EU project, Progress in
Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry 30(4),

 runt, T. M. and Van den Brink, W. (2012), Monitoring illicit


B
psychostimulants and related health issues, in Thse de M.
Oisterwijk (ed.), BOXPress.

 ondomines, B. and Hennequin, E. (2014), Studying sensitive


C
issues: the contributions of a mixed approach, RIMHE: Revue
Interdisciplinaire Management, Homme(s) & Entreprise 14(5),
pp. 319.

 MCDDA (2011a), Online sales of new psychoactive


E
substances/legal highs: summary of results from the 2011
multilingual snapshots, Briefing paper 15/11/2011, European
Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, Lisbon.

 MCDDA (2011b), Responding to new psychoactive


E
substances, Drugs in Focus 22, pp. 14.

 uropean Commission (2013), Report on the proposal for a


E
regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council
laying down measures concerning the European single market
for electronic communications and to achieve a Connected
Continent, and amending Directives 2002/20/EC, 2002/21/
EC, 2002/22/EC, and Regulations (EC) No 1211/2009 and
(EU) No 531/2012 (COM(2013)0627 - C7-0267/2013 2013/0309(COD)), European Commission, Brussels.

(14) The balloon effect refers to the displacement of criminal activities from
one geographical area to another.

104

pp. 640646.

 chmidt, M. M., Sharma, A., Schifano, F. and Feinmann, C.


S
(2011), Legal highs on the net-Evaluation of UK-based
Websites, products and product information, Forensic
Science International 206(13), pp. 9297.

11

CHAPTER 11

Online supply of medicines to illicit


drug markets: situation and
responses
Lynda Scammell and Alessandra Bo

I Introduction
This chapter explores what is known about the online
supply of medicines and medicinal products, with a
focus on the sale of psychoactive medicines via online
pharmacies and/or other virtual platforms and their
potential role as a source for the illicit drug market. In
Europe, the misuse of medicines such as methadone,
buprenorphine, fentanyls and benzodiazepines among
high-risk drug users has been reported more frequently
in recent years, for example among clients entering drug
treatment centres (EMCDDA, 2015). The source of
supply of these drugs is not always clear, but it is likely to
include diversion from legitimate medical sources, the
global unregulated trade in medicines and illicit
production (Griffiths et al., 2014). Whatever the source of
production, or mechanism of diversion, recent years
have witnessed an increase in the illicit online sale of
medicines. What is less clear is whether the internet in
general, and online pharmacies in particular, have a
significant role as a source of supply of medicines to
illicit drug markets in Europe.
The subject of illicit internet supply of medicines and
responses to it is a complex one, and this chapter briefly
addresses the broader topics of licit and illicit online
pharmacies, as well as counterfeit and falsified
medicines, before looking at the limited evidence of links
with illicit drug markets. It finishes on the issue of policy
and practice responses in the area. The lead author has
many years of experience working in the United Kingdom
in the field of medicines regulation, and includes here
examples and case studies from this country for
illustrative purposes.

Types of medicinal products sold


online

The online sale of medicines took off in the early 2000s


(Forman, 2006a) and, although various platforms have
been used, online pharmacies have been a primary
source of distribution. In the early days, the most popular
products to be supplied on the web were natural and
herbal medicinal products, smoking cessation aids, and
beauty and sexual performance enhancement products
(such as Viagra) (Orizio et al., 2011). More recently, the
market for enhancement drugs such as muscle builders,
diet pills and sunless self-tanning sprays has been
expanding (Evans-Browns et al., 2012) and there have
been reports of cancer drugs and stem cells being
marketed over the internet (Fittler et al., 2013).
Medicines sold online are typically categorised by
national regulatory agencies into over the counter (OTC)
and prescription-only medications (POMs). The legal
position surrounding the online supply of medicines
varies across the European Union. Some countries, such
as the United Kingdom and Germany, allow all classes of
medicines (POMs and OTC medicines) to be sold online.
Others allow only OTC medicines to be supplied online,
and some countries, such as Italy, prohibit the supply of
medicines online altogether (see Figure11.1). The
advertising of a POMs is not permitted anywhere in the
European Union and therefore any website advertising a
POMs is in breach of legislative requirements and action
can be taken to remove the website.

107

The internet and drug markets

FIGURE11.1
Different legislative positions in the European Union on
the online sale of medicines
Both over the counter
and prescription allowed
Only over the counter
allowed
No online sales allowed

facilitating and enhancing this global market is widely


acknowledged, posing an increased threat to public
health. According to WHO, around 50% of the medicines
sold online from illegal sites concealing their physical
identity are counterfeits(WHO, 2010).
Finally, cases of online sales of food and dietary
supplements such as phenibut have also been on the
rise. Phenibut is an authorised medicine in Russia used
for treating anxiety, alcohol withdrawal, OCD,

The United Kingdom position on the


online sale of medicines
The United Kingdom has strict legal controls on the
sale, supply and advertisement of medicinal
Source: L. Scammell, presentation at expert meeting held at the
EMCDDA, 3031 October 2014.

products. Under medicines legislation, it is unlawful


for medicinal products for human use to be
marketed, manufactured, imported from a third

In addition to the sale of OTC medicines and POMs,


increasing attention has been paid to the topic of
counterfeit and falsified medicines in recent years.
According to the European Medicines Agency, falsified
medicines are fake medicines that are designed to mimic
real medicines that is, a product that passes itself off
as a real, authorised medicine while counterfeit
medicines are medicines that do not comply with
intellectual-property rights or that infringe trademark
law that is, a product made by someone other than
the genuine manufacturer, by copying or imitating an
original product without authority or rights (EMA, 2015).
Internationally, there is not an agreed definition, and the
World Health Organization (WHO) addresses the
problem with a broader definition that encapsulates both
concepts: counterfeit medicine is one which is
deliberately and fraudulently mislabelled with respect to
identity and/or source. Counterfeiting can apply to both
branded and generic products and counterfeit products
may include products with the correct ingredients or
with the wrong ingredients, without active ingredients,
with insufficient active ingredients or with fake
packaging (1).

country, distributed and sold or supplied in the

Counterfeit medicines include all types of medicinal


product, both OTC medicines and POMs, as well as
enhancement drugs, and the WHO called the problem of
counterfeit medicines a growing threat to public health
around the world (WHO, 2010). The criminal market for
counterfeit medicines was estimated to be worth
GBP55billion (approximately EUR78billion) in 2010
(Jackson, 2009). The central role of the internet in

bricks-and-mortar premises; for example, POMs

United Kingdom except in accordance with the


appropriate licences or exemptions. The United
Kingdom has three legal classes of authorised
medicines:
n


General sale list (GSL) medicines are suitable
for sale and normal use without supervision or
advice from a pharmacist or doctor.


Pharmacy (P) medicines can only be obtained
from a pharmacy and are sold or supplied under
the supervision of a pharmacist.


Prescription-only medicines (POMs) must be
prescribed by an authorised healthcare
professional, for example a doctor, dentist or
independent prescriber.

A UK registered pharmacy may have a presence on


the internet; however, the legislative requirements
apply equally to UK internet pharmacies and
cannot be advertised directly to the public. These
legal controls also apply equally to medicines for
human use sold or supplied via the internet or
through email transactions. Some POMs are
controlled drugs (such as benzodiazepines) and
their availability to patients can be subject to
additional control under the Misuse of Drugs Act
1971, which is administered by the Home Office.

(1) See: http://www.who.int/medicines/regulation/ssffc/definitions/en/

108

CHAPTER 11 IOnline supply of medicines to illicit drug markets: situation and responses

stammering and insomnia, but it is not licensed as a


medicine in Europe or approved as a pharmaceutical in
the United States.

I Sales platforms
I Online pharmacies: legitimate and illegitimate
Online pharmacies, of varying degrees of legitimacy, are
the major online market platform for medicines. Online
(or internet) pharmacies are retail companies that
operate partially or exclusively over the internet and sell
medicinal preparations, including prescription-only
drugs, via online ordering and mail delivery (Orizio et al.,
2011; Lavorgna, 2014).
Online pharmacies have been classified in several ways
(Arruada, 2004; Mkinen et al., 2005; Jena et al., 2011;
NABP, 2014b; LegitScript, 2015), but the different
classification criteria all have a focus on consumer
safety at their core. According to the latest US Internet
Drug Outlet Identification Program progress report, of
the 10866 internet drug outlets selling prescription
medications reviewed between April and September
2014, 96.4% (10473) were found not to be in
compliance with American State and Federal laws and/
or National Association of Boards of Pharmacy patient
safety and pharmacy practice standards (NABP, 2014a).
These data resonate with the information provided by
LegitScript, a US-based initiative with the largest
database of health-related websites; it monitors over
331430 websites, of which currently 35610 are active

internet pharmacies and 33579 (94.3%) are not


operating legitimately (LegitScript, 2015).
From a consumer safety perspective, online pharmacies
can be classified into two main categories: (i) legitimate
and (ii) illegitimate. Legitimate websites comply with
national and international regulations and standards,
guaranteeing the quality of the product, requiring a valid
medical prescription when buying controlled medicines
and ultimately assuring consumer safety. On the other
hand, illegitimate online pharmacies are, often, not
registered with any recognised accreditation system and
do not abide by regulations and professional standards,
and are therefore operating illegally. They typically sell
medicines without prescriptions, or they market
counterfeit or falsified products, putting consumer
safety at risk. Illegitimate pharmacies can be further
divided into sub-categories depending on the degree of
compliance with national and international standards.
A recent systematic review by Orizio et al. (2011)
outlined some of the major features of online
pharmacies described in the literature (see Table11.1).
These include affiliation to any internationally recognised
accreditation system; the disclosure of geographical
location and contact details; the types of medicines
available; the quality of the product (from the packaging
and instructions to the chemical composition); the
availability of information on the product; the
requirement of a valid prescription for controlled
medicines; and the availability of an online medical
consultation.
As highlighted in the criminological research by
Lavorgna (2014), the advent of Web2.0 provided new

TABLE11.1
Selected features of online pharmacies summary of analytical frameworks used in research
Legitimate sites

Illegitimate sites

Affiliation to any internationally recognised


accreditation system

Affiliation to internationally recognised


accreditation systems are clear and visible

Usually no affiliation to internationally


recognised accreditation system

Disclosure of the geographical location and


contact details

Geographical location and contact details are


disclosed

Typically concealment of both


geographical location and contact
details

Types of medicines available

Any medical product available in a physical


pharmacy

Anything, but usually specialising in


prescription-only medicines

Quality of the product

Product is genuine
Instructions included

Spectrometry analysis is more likely to


indicate counterfeit products
Packaging and instructions can be
problematic

Availability of information on the product

Comprehensive information on the product

Often limited information on the


product

Requirement of a valid prescription for


controlled medicines

Valid prescription required

No valid prescription required

Availability of online medical consultation/


information

Optimal medical consultation/information

Often sub-optimal medical


consultation/information

109

The internet and drug markets

criminal opportunities in the online trade in counterfeit


medicines and affected the market in a number of
different ways. The internet not only affected
communication and transportation, enhancing their
efficiency, but also changed the modus operandi of
criminal networks. For example, the internet has allowed
more streamlined management of the distribution
process and has opened up opportunities for new actors
who are not affiliated to established criminal networks or
organisations to enter the market. A new trend identified
by Lavorgna (2014) is the online purchase of medicinal
products in larger quantities than previously, for the
purpose of resale, mainly in local, offline markets. The
online market allows individuals to step easily into the
trafficking chain, and to target sales at certain consumer
segments, particularly in the area of lifestyle and doping
products.
Furthermore, Lavorgna suggests that the internet has
influenced interactions with clients and allowed
suppliers to use promotional tactics, persuasive
marketing and loyalty-building strategies to market their
products to a larger potential customer base.

I Diversification of retail outlets: eBay, Amazon


Online pharmacies are not the only type of retail outlet
selling medicines over the internet. Dedicated forums,
social media and online magazines increasingly play a
role in the sale and advertisement of medicines,
particularly with regard to doping products, lifestyle
products and enhancement drugs (Lavorgna, 2014).
Trading platforms such as eBay and Amazon also run
advertisements offering to supply medicines. In Europe,
the legality of this will vary from Member State to
Member State. POMs, medicines that are required to be
dispensed by a pharmacist (or under their direct
supervision) and unlicensed medicines cannot be legally
sold and supplied in this way.
In the United Kingdom, the MHRA has arrangements in
place with eBay and Amazon to ensure that
advertisements and listings for medicines that legally
should not be supplied in this way are removed (usually
within 24hours).

I A source for the illicit drug market?


Although there is increasing concern about the potential
role of illegally operating online pharmacies in the supply of
psychoactive medicines for misuse, there are

110

disappointingly few studies in this area (Forman et al.,


2006a; Nielsen and Barratt, 2009; Ghodse, 2010), and
these are mostly from outside Europe. The scientific
evidence on general population behaviour with regard to
the online purchase of medicines relies on two types of
data: surveys and clinical case studies. A systematic review
by Orizio (2011) found that the percentage of people
reporting that they had purchased medicines online, mostly
from US studies, is generally low, at between 1 and 6% of
the population, and slightly higher in studies where the
intention to buy online was also considered.
The misuse of controlled substances obtained online is a
growing and well-documented concern in the United
States (Forman et al., 2006b; Jena et al., 2011). One study
used state-level data to investigate whether or not the rise
in prescription drug abuse between 2000 and 2007 was
associated with the growth in high-speed internet access.
The regression analysis showed that for every 10%
growth of high-speed internet use there was a 1%
increase in substance abuse treatment admissions for
drugs readily available on the internet, for example
prescription opioids, benzodiazepines, sedative hypnotics
and stimulants (including amphetamine), while the
correlation was not there for substances not available
online, such as alcohol, heroin or cocaine (Goldman and
Jena, 2011). However, despite well-documented evidence
of an increase in the misuse and abuse of prescription
drugs (Lipman and Jackson, 2006; SAMSHA, 2012), there
is a lack of evidence to suggest that the source of these
drugs at the level of an individual user is the internet.
Although the use of prescription opioids has purportedly
reached its peak in the United States, the average level
of use in the European Union is currently 4.5 times lower
(ALICE RAP, 2013). Several system-level factors have
been hypothesised to contribute to this difference, such
as the less severe regulatory systems operating in the
United States and the different prescription and
dispensing practices (Fischer et al., 2014). However,
patterns are changing and also in Europe the misuse of
opioid substitution treatment medicines has been
reported more frequently in drug treatment centres
(EMCDDA, 2015). The source of these drugs within the
EU borders has been associated with the global
unregulated trade of medicines as well as the complex
market of new psychoactive substances (Griffiths et al.,
2014), yet no specific research is available on the role of
the internet and online retailers.
Inciardi et al. (2010) carried out a specific study in the
United States investigating who the end-users of
prescription drugs purchased over the internet were.
Five key datasets focusing on the potential populations
of end-users (including national and college surveys and

CHAPTER 11 IOnline supply of medicines to illicit drug markets: situation and responses

opioid maintenance treatment programmes) were


considered. The results were consistent across the
different populations: the internet is a relatively minor
source for the illicit purchase of prescription drugs. The
main sources of supply varied across the groups but
were typically drug dealers, friends or relatives, and the
medical system itself. The authors suggest that,
although the internet might not be a major source for
end-users, it may play a larger role at the dealer level.
A more recent study (Bachhuber and Cunningham,
2013) investigated the online purchase of the synthetic
opioid buprenorphine without a prescription. After
screening for unique sites and testing their stability over
a six-month period, the study identified 20 illegitimate
sites selling buprenorphine and only two legitimate sites.
The price of a 30-day supply offered on the illegitimate
sites varied between USD232 and USD1163, whereas
the same dose was sold in the legitimate sites for as low
as USD58 and not over USD135. The authors conclude
that sites on the surface web are unlikely to be reliable
sources of buprenorphine supply and that the growing
dark net markets may provide a more reliable and less
expensive alternative (Aldridge and Decary-Hetu, 2014).

Responding to the problem of the illicit


online supply of medicines

The criminal market in pharmaceuticals thrives in an


environment characterised by a lack of stable and
harmonised legislation within and across countries.
Specific supply-focused responses do, however, exist
and they tackle the problem at different levels:
nn

regulating the trade of online pharmacies;

nn

monitoring prescription drugs;

nn

implementing coordinated international supply


reduction activities.

In June 2014, the European Commission passed a new


Implementing Regulation (699/2014) that gave Member
States one year to apply a common logo to the websites
of all retailers of medicines legally operating in the
European Union (European Commission, 2014). The
regulation was implemented across the European Union
on 1July2015 and also involves a national database
listing details of legal suppliers in each Member State.
Although the logo could be forged by the illegal sites, it
is, nevertheless, an important first step in regulating
online pharmacies across Europe (Figure11.2).

FIGURE11.2
Promotional campaign for the EU logo for online
retailers of medicines

Source: European Commission, available at: http://ec.europa.eu/health/


human-use/eu-logo/index_en.htm

Different international accreditation/verification systems


already exist to ensure consumer safety, as they warrant
that online retailers follow quality standards in their
practice. One example is the HON-Code (Health on the
Net Code), which is based on ethical standards in
offering medical information on the web (2).
With regard to responses to counterfeit and falsified
medicines, the US Food and Drug Administration has
developed a dedicated section on its website for
consumers on Buying medicines over the Internet (FDA,
2015). The European Medicines Agency has also
developed dedicated resources to warn consumers
about falsified medicines (EMA, 2015), and several
pan-European initiatives, representing a broad range of
interests, have been set up to inform patients on how to
buy medicines safely online (e.g. the European Alliance
for Access to Safe Medicines and the Alliance for Safe
Online Pharmacies).
In terms of law enforcement responses, international
efforts are led by Interpol through Operation Pangea.
This initiative was started by the MHRA in the United
Kingdom in 2004 and has expanded each year until
Interpol took on a coordination role. The operation
started in 2008 and runs for a week each year. It brings
together several law enforcement bodies from countries
around the world including customs, health regulators
and national police, and includes the private sector. It
tackles the online sale of counterfeit medicines and
(2) The HON-Code is the most widely accepted reference for online
health and medical publishers. Currently, the Code is used by over 7300
certified websites more than 10 million pages, covering 102 countries and
translated in to 35 different languages. Health on the Net Foundation
(HON) was granted non-governmental organisation status on 23 July
2002 by the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. HON also
has a partnership at the French governmental level, when it was
accredited in 2007 by the French National Authority (HAS) to be the
official certifying body for all French health websites. Source: https://
www.healthonnet.org/HONcode/Patients/Visitor/visitor.html

111

The internet and drug markets

highlights the dangers of buying medicines online. The


last operation took place in June 2015 (Interpol, 2015)
and resulted in 20.7million counterfeit medicines (worth
more than USD81million) being seized, 156 arrests and
more than 2410 websites being taken offline.
At European level, there is not a common legislative
approach to tackling the problem of counterfeit
medicines. National initiatives such as those
implemented by the MHRA in the United Kingdom
include routine monitoring of medicines offered for sale
online, investigative activities of illegal activity taking
place on a website and, where appropriate, taking
enforcement action against suppliers who operate
outside the legal requirements. It also runs campaigns
with patient associations and the General
Pharmaceutical Council (the UK regulator for the retail
pharmacy sector) and collaborates with industry to
test-purchase medicines from websites. With the
assistance of the Metropolitan Police Central e-Crime
Unit and cooperation from domain name providers, such
as Nominet (the provider of the Dot UK domain space),
the MHRA has closed down thousands of websites
(including sites based overseas) and brought hundreds
more into compliance.

I Conclusion and future trends


This review has shown that the online supply of medicines
is a complex issue and of growing concern. However, in
relation to illicit drug markets, the available evidence
suggests that currently online retailers play a minor role in
the supply of medicines to illicit marketplaces. New
evidence also indicates that cryptomarkets on the deep
web may become more involved in the supply of
controlled prescription drugs in the future.
Overall, this review has highlighted the need for a better
understanding of the role of surface web retailers, such
as online pharmacies, in the diversion of prescription
medicines, and the need for more targeted consumerlevel research focusing on sources of drug supply.
Moreover, owing to the very different regulatory systems
and prescription and dispensing practices in the United
States and Europe, specific EU studies would be
desirable.

I References
I

112

 ldridge, J. and Dcary-Htu, D. (2014), Not an eBay for


A
drugs: the cryptomarket Silk Road as a paradigm shifting
criminal innovation. Available at: http://ssrn.com/

abstract=2436643 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/
ssrn.2436643

 LICE RAP (2013), Prescription opioids and public health in


A
the European Union, AR Policy Paper4, http://www.alicerap.
eu/resources/documents/cat_view/1-alice-rap-projectdocuments/19-policy-paper-series.html

 rruada, B. (2004), Quality safeguards and regulation of


A
online pharmacies, Health Economics 13(4), pp.329344.

 achhuber, M.A. and Cunningham, C.O. (2013), Availability


B
of buprenorphine on the Internet for purchase without a
prescription, Drug and Alcohol Dependence 130(0),
pp.238240.

 MA (European Medicines Agency) (2015), Falsified


E
medicines http://www.ema.europa.eu/ema/index.
jsp?curl=pages/special_topics/general/general_
content_000186.jsp&mid=WC0b01ac058002d4e8

EMCDDA (2015), European drug report 2014: trends and


developments, Publications Office of the European Union,
Luxembourg. Available at: http://www.emcdda.europa.eu/
publications/edr/trends-developments/2015

 uropean Commission (2014), Commission Implementing


E
Regulation (EU) No 699/2014 of 24June2014 on the design
of the common logo to identify persons offering medicinal
products for sale at a distance to the public and the technical,
electronic and cryptographic requirements for verification of
its authenticity, Official Journal of the European Union.
Available at: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/
PDF/?uri=OJ:JOL_2014_184_R_0004&from=EN

 vans-Brown, M., McVeigh, J., Perkins, C. and Bellis, M.A.


E
(2012), Human enhancement drugs: the emerging challenges
to public health, North West Public Health Observatory Centre
for Public Health, Faculty of Health and Applied Social
Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University. Available at:
http://www.erpho.org.uk/viewResource.aspx?id=22342

 DA (US Food and Drug Administration) (2015), US


F
Department of Health and Human Services, Buying
medicines over the Internet, http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/
ResourcesForYou/Consumers/BuyingUsingMedicineSafely/
BuyingMedicinesOvertheInternet/default.htm

 ischer, B., Keates, A., Bhringer, G., Reimer, J. and Rehm, J.


F
(2014), Non-medical use of prescription opioids and
prescription opioid-related harms: why so markedly higher in
North America compared to the rest of the world?, Addiction
109, pp.177181.

 ittler, A., Bsze, G. and Botz, L. (2013), Evaluating aspects


F
of online medication safety in long-term follow-up of 136
Internet pharmacies: illegal rogue online pharmacies flourish
and are long-lived, Journal of Medical Internet Research
15(9), e199.

 orman, R.F., Marlowe, D.B. and McLellan, A.T. (2006a), The


F
Internet as a source of drugs of abuse, Current Psychiatry
Reports 8, pp.377382.

 orman, R.F., Woody, G.E., McLellan, T. and Lynch, K.G.


F
(2006b), The availability of web sites offering to sell opioid

CHAPTER 11 IOnline supply of medicines to illicit drug markets: situation and responses

medications without prescriptions, American Journal of


Psychiatry 163(7), pp.12331238.

challenges, European Journal of Criminology 116, doi:


10.1177/1477370814554722

 hodse, H. (2010), Watching Internet pharmacies, British


G
Journal of Psychiatry 196(3), pp.169170.

 egitScript (2015), Internet pharmacy classifications,


L
http://www.legitscript.com/pharmacies/classifications/

 oldman, D.P. and Jena, A.B. (2011), Growing Internet use


G
may help explain the rise in prescription drug abuse in the
United States, Health Affairs (Millwood) 30(6), doi:10.1377/
hlthaff.2011.0155

 ipman, A.G. and Jackson, K.C. (2006), Controlled


L
prescription drug abuse at epidemic level, Journal of Pain and
Palliative Care Pharmacotherapy 20, pp.6164.

 rabosky, P.N. and Smith R.G. (2001), Telecommunication


G
fraud in the digital age: the convergence of technologies, in
Wall, D.S. (ed.), Crime and the Internet, Routledge, London/
New York.

 kinen, M.M., Rautava P.T. and Forsstrm, J.J. (2005), Do


M
online pharmacies fit European internal markets?, Health
Policy 72(2), pp.245252.

 ABP (National Association of Boards of Pharmacy) (2014a),


N
Internet drug outlet identification program progress report for
state and federal regulators, http://safeonlinerx.com/
wp-content/uploads/2014/11/idoi-report-oct2014.pdf

 ABP (2014b), See the website for details at: http://www.


N
nabp.net/programs/consumer-protection/buying-medicineonline

Nielsen, S. and Barratt, M.J. (2009), Prescription drug

 rizio, G., Merla, A., Schulz, P.J. and Gelatti, U. (2011), Quality
O
of online pharmacies and websites selling prescription drugs:
a systematic review, Journal of Medical Internet Research
13(3), e74.

 ADARS System (2015), www.radars.org SAMHSA


R
(Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration)
(2012), Results from the 2012 National Survey on Drug Use
and Health: summary of national findings, http://www.
samhsa.gov/data/NSDUH/2012SummNatFindDetTables/
NationalFindings/NSDUHresults2012.pdf

WHO (2010), Bulletin of the World Health Organization 88(4),


pp.241320.

 riffiths, P., Evans-Brown, M. and Sedefov, R. (2014),


G
Commentary on Fischer et al: Non-medical use of prescription
opioids and prescription opioid-related harms: why so
markedly higher in North America compared to the rest of the
world?, Addiction 109(2), pp.177181.
Inciardi, J.A., Surratt, H.L., Cicero, T.J. et al. (2010),
Prescription drugs purchased through the Internet: who are
the end users?, Drug and Alcohol Dependence 110(12),
pp.2129.

I nterpol (2015), Operation Pangea, 2015, http://www.interpol.


int/Crime-areas/Pharmaceutical-crime/Operations/
Operation-Pangea

 ackson, G. (2009), Faking it: The dangers of counterfeit


J
medicine on the Internet, International Journal of Clinical
Practice 63(2), p.181

 ena, A.B., Goldman, D.P., Foster, S.E. and Califano Jr, J.A.
J
(2011), Prescription medication abuse and illegitimate
Internet-based pharmacies, Annals of Internal Medicine, 155,
pp.848850.

 avorgna, A. (2014), The online trade in counterfeit


L
pharmaceuticals: new criminal opportunities, trends and

misuse: is technology friend or foe?, Drug and Alcohol Review


28, pp.8186.

113

12

CHAPTER 12

Social media and drug markets


Danica Thanki and Brian Frederick

I Introduction
This chapter provides an overview of social media
platforms and how they can affect drug markets.
Drawing on the literature to explore the drug-related
content existing on various social media channels, the
chapter discusses how social media have both a direct
impact on drug supply and an indirect impact on
demand for drugs. The chapter goes on to provide a
summary of responses and discusses the need for
future research to develop our understanding of social
media and how they affect drug supply and demand.

feature significant user interactivity and participation, as


well as multidirectional lines of communication, and
represent a transformation in the way in which we use
the internet.
FIGURE 12.1
The different types of social media

I Social media
Social media, according to Mandiberg (2012), are new
technological frameworks that enable formerly passive
media consumers to make and disseminate their own
media. They reflect the evolution of Web2.0
technologies, which allow users to continuously create,
modify and/or publish content and applications in a
participatory and collaborative fashion (Kaplan and
Haenlein, 2010, p.61). Social media sites predominantly
exist on the surface web and are, therefore, visible to all
internet users, although they require varying levels of
user registration for participation. Nevertheless, usermodified content also exists on the deep web, for
example in forum discussions such as Silk Roads Ask a
Drug Expert Physician about Drugs and Health (see
Chapter7), while some social media sites established on
the surface web, including the social networking giant
Facebook, have recently allowed users anonymous
access on the deep web through the Tor Browser.
The term social media encompasses numerous types of
social interaction sites and apps, including social
networking sites, photo- and video-sharing sites, blogs
and micro-blogs, discussion and forum sites, review and
ratings sites, and social streams. Figure12.1 provides a
visual overview of the different types of social media
through what Solis (2015) calls the conversation prism.
Although sites differ in communication mode, they all

Source: Brian Solis and Jesse Thomas.

The recent exponential growth of the internet, and in


particular of social media, and the impact it has had on
contemporary society is vast. According to Nielsen
(2012), a US- and Netherlands-based global information
and measurement company, internet users spend more
time engaging with social media sites and applications
than on any other type of site. Facebook, which became
publicly accessible at the end of 2006, currently has
more than 1.6billion registered users worldwide,
1.35billion of whom have been active in the previous
30days; YouTube, the video-sharing site, has more than
1billion active users; and Twitter, the social streaming
site, has more than 500million registered users. In

115

The internet and drug markets

addition to providing opportunities for increased


communication and knowledge sharing among
individuals, social media have substantially changed the
way that businesses, organisations, communities and
individuals interact.

shown that traditional media coverage of drugs can


increase interest in buying drugs (Forsyth, 2012).
Nevertheless, there remains insufficient evidence to
provide us with a good understanding of the impact of
social media on the demand for drugs.

As the world of social media develops at a rapid pace,


many new technologies go viral before their potential
impact can be determined. Although there are
undoubtedly benefits to the increased opportunities for
social interaction, there are also well-documented
concerns around the negative impact of social media,
particularly in relation to bullying and sexual exploitation.
There are also reports of social media being used to
orchestrate the activities of subversive and extremist
groups (Schils and Pauwels, 2013), organised crime
syndicates (Kingston, 2014) and terrorist organisations
(Zeng et al., 2010).

In order to better understand the role of social media in


drug markets, systematic analyses of numerous social
media platforms are needed, incorporating a wide range
of different perspectives. Currently, research studies
looking at a specific social media application are more
common in peer-reviewed journals (as well as in grey
literature). These often focus only on the existence of
drug-related content rather than its impact, generally on
the premise that this content increases the demand for
drugs. Examples of the different types of drug-related
content on social media and of current knowledge and
research are given below.

Although some social media users concerned about


their privacy may protect their identity, many others do
not take precautions and may have poor security levels.
Similarly, some users may refrain from posting content
that may be unlawful or that they know to be unlawful on
social media platforms, while others may succumb to
what has been called an illusion of anonymity and
openly post content that transgresses legal and/or moral
thresholds (Zheleva and Getoor, 2009).

I Social media and drug markets


In general, social media can affect drug markets in two
ways. First, social media may have an impact on the
supply of drugs by providing opportunities for buying
and selling drugs (direct impact). Second, they may have
an impact on the market by affecting the demand for
drugs in general and for individual drugs through, for
example, the impact of drug-related experience sharing,
drug-themed photo and video sharing, and drug-focused
opinion forming (indirect impact).
There are, however, few research studies exploring social
media and drug markets. Where research on social
media does address drugs, it tends to be in the fields of
behavioural health, epidemiology and public health,
rather than criminology. Research, therefore, tends to
focus on the influence of drug-related social media
content on young peoples demand for drugs rather than
on the supply of drugs through social media channels.
Although concerns exist about the impact of greater
exposure to drug-related content on demand for drugs,
particularly among young people, the evidence of its
impact remains scarce, although some studies have

116

I Supply of drugs
Social media can facilitate the supply of drugs in a
number of ways. One way is that users can directly
advertise drugs for sale. In 2014, drugabuse.com
published an infographic documenting drug dealer
activity on the picture- and video-sharing service
Instagram (drugabuse.com, 2014). By searching for
hashtags relating to drug sales, the researchers were
able to identify 50 drug dealer accounts in a day. Many
contained photographs of drugs for sale. Social media
were used to advertise the drugs for sale, but the
transactions took place through other communication
channels, such as mobile phones or messaging apps,
which often allow users to remain anonymous. However,
the researchers found that more than one-third of the
drug dealers identified displayed a photograph of their
face. There have also been numerous media reports of
dealers caught by law enforcement agencies after
posting details of their drug dealing activities through
personal social media accounts, for example through
Facebook accounts. Some researchers have begun to
use web analytics to discover the presence of drugs for
sale on social media.
Social media can also provide potential buyers with
information on how and where they can purchase drugs,
as well as evidence of successful purchases in the form
of positive feedback. In his article Teens on Tumblr cant
stop bragging about Silk Road drug deals, journalist
Patrick Howell ONeill analysed the microblogging site
Tumblr for material posted by teenagers who were
interested in how to buy drugs on the dark web site Silk
Road (ONeill, 2013). The posts included details and

CHAPTER 12 ISocial media and drug markets

pictures (including selfies) of users, as well as advice on


how to shop on Silk Road. ONeill discovered that
adolescents often implicated their friends, girlfriends
and boyfriends in their Tumblr posts; some even
mentioned their parents: 5/5, package came on
schedule. My dad intercepted the package though, so no
Xanax for me!
Research has consistently found that young people
obtain drugs through their social networks (Duffy et al.,
2008), with friends being the most common source of
drugs (European Commission, 2014). It stands to reason
that, as social networks move increasingly from the real
world to the digital world, the buying and selling of drugs
will follow suit. Nevertheless, although social media can
facilitate drug supply, the exchange of the product must
still take place in the physical environment, through the
postal service or face-to-face.

Drug-related content on social


networking sites

There are concerns that the presence of drug-related


content on social networking sites could influence
normative behaviours regarding drug use and increase
demand for drugs, particularly among young people.
Cavazos-Rehg et al. (2014) analysed the demographics
of the almost 1million followers of a pro-marijuana
Twitter handle (handle being Twitter jargon for a users
screen name) and the content of the tweets posted
using that handle. They found that the majority of the
followers were 19 years old or under (73%) and that
54% of them were female. The content mainly
concerned positive cannabis discourse; many of the
tweets were perceived as humorous. The authors
warned of the influence of social media during
adolescence and the potential impact on drug using
behaviours.
Another study by Hanson et al. (2013a) performed a
qualitative analysis of the quantity and content of
tweets containing the drug name Adderall. The study
reported 213633 Adderall-related tweets over a
six-month period, with a peak coinciding during the
examinations period. Tweets were also analysed for
content related to motives, side effects, poly-use and
possible normative influence. The authors concluded
that Adderall discussions through social media such as
Twitter may contribute to normative behaviour regarding
its abuse. A similar conclusion was drawn by Hanson et
al. (2013b) in relation to social circles and prescription
drug abuse.

Concerns around online social networks mirror those


related to offline social networks; principally, that
exposure to certain behaviours within a social network
will affect an individuals behaviour and social norms.
However, what is unclear is the added impact that easier
access to groups of like-minded individuals through
online communities has on individual behavioural norms.
This may be of particular importance for traditionally
hidden activities such as drug use and supply, with
individuals able to seek out online groups easily and
anonymously.

I Specific drug forums


There are a large number of user forums dedicated to the
discussion of illicit drugs, such as Bluelight.ru, Erowid
and Drugs-forum.com. Most research has explored the
harm reduction aspects of these forums, with the
majority of users claiming that they access the sites
primarily to learn how to use drugs more safely (Chiauzzi
et al., 2013). Research often highlights the opportunity
to use forums for targeted prevention (Soussan and
Kjellgren, 2014). Nevertheless, there are concerns that
the forums content could encourage experimentation
with a wider range of drugs and increase demand for
certain substances. For example, information about how
to extract active ingredients from pharmaceuticals may
increase demand for such substances. Conversely, bad
trip reports on forums and warnings about individual
substances and methods of drug use may decrease
demand for particular substances and influence types of
use. Although there is limited evidence of the impact of
forums on drug use behaviours, the ability to monitor
discussions can be a useful tool for the identification of
emerging trends in drug use and markets and to inform
policy and practice (Davey et al., 2012).

I Video and picture sharing


YouTube is the most popular video-sharing site, while the
picture-sharing sites Flickr and Instagram are also very
popular at the time of writing. In addition, many other
social media channels not specifically viewed as focused
on picture or video sharing provide users with
opportunities to share these types of media. Lau et al.
(2012) highlight the potential negative impact of social
media content depicting behaviours such as drug use,
although the authors suggest that further research is
needed on how this online content is disseminated and
how individuals process it.

117

The internet and drug markets

Much research focuses on the content of social media.


For example, Manning (2013) examined the link
between YouTube, drug videos and drug education. The
study involved a content analysis of 750 drug videos
(sampled from over 300000 individual YouTube
videos), of which 12% had been posted by official
agencies (see Figure 12.2). The study found that a
minority (16%) of the drug-related videos on YouTube
were celebratory (i.e., hedonistic), but that these
differed by drug for example, no celebratory videos
about heroin or crystal meth were found. Many
cautionary videos (also known as vernacular
prevention videos) were also identified. Do-it-yourself
(DIY) videos (e.g. videos that provided instructions on
how to grow your own cannabis) and legal high
advertisements were also identified. The study
concluded that official prevention campaigns should
use more modern methods to reach individuals.
A similar study (Lange et al., 2010) also identified a large
number of drug use-related videos on YouTube. It found
that the researchers were able to analyse the effects and
side effects of Salvia divinorum solely by viewing
YouTube user-uploaded videos. Walsh (2011) argued
that the existence of Salvia videos on YouTube increased
public awareness of the substance and stimulated
demand, but also put it on the agenda of law-makers in
the United Kingdom, thus contributing to its prohibition
and attempts to restrict the market.
FIGURE 12.2
The sample of YouTube drug videos coded by drug
discourses
Docs
Celebratory
News
Cautionary
Consumer DIY
Traditional drugs education
Reflective

I Drug-themed apps
There are a large number of drug-themed apps available
from app stores such as Google Play and Apples App
Store. These include apps designed to prevent drug use
such as Your Face on Meth, which allows users to upload
a picture and see the physical degradation that would
result over time from using methamphetamine. Other
apps promote drug use. Research by Bindham et al.
(2014) focused on apps promoting illicit drug use, with
the author observing an increase in these types of apps
over a three-month period. By the end of the study (in
2012), 410 drug-promoting apps were identified, the
majority of which (98%) were found to promote
cannabis, with many providing a forum for like-minded
drug-users. Some examples of the types of apps that
were found included drug-themed wallpaper apps; apps
that provided information on drug use; drug-themed
gaming apps; drug use simulations; drug-themed clock
widgets; a drug-themed battery icon widget; drugrelated stickers; and apps that were used to share
substance use stories. Others, such as the How to Sell
Weed app, provide instructions for the production and
selling of cannabis. The authors of the study voiced
public health concerns, particularly in relation to young
people, and suggested government intervention as a
means to enforce [the] proper standardisation of
app-rating processes.
In the United States, where the sale of cannabis in
licensed outlets has recently become legal in some
states, news reports have highlighted the existence of
apps related to the cannabis trade. For example, one
report likened the Leafy App (launched on
26January2015) to a Grindr for weed in that the app
offers an interactive catalogue of different varieties of
cannabis, their characteristics and availability (mostly in
medical cannabis outlets) based on the nearest GPS
location (Neal, 2014). Another journalist reported on
Weedhire an app that was designed to connect pot
labs, dispensaries and even government regulators to
potential employees in the (legal) cannabis industry
(ONeill, 2013).

Other
New drugs education

Satirical
0
Source: Manning (2013).

Social media sites and networks

Legal high ads

20

40

60

80

100 120 140

facilitating drug-related encounters


between men who have sex with men

One of the most common ways to access and interact


with social media is through smartphone and tablet
apps. Some geosocial networking apps employ locationbased mobile social computing using the Global

118

CHAPTER 12 ISocial media and drug markets

Positioning System to establish a users proximity to


other users. Grindr, which claims to have 5million users
in 192 countries worldwide (1), is an example of this type
of app and is used primarily by men who have sex with
men (MSM). It has recently been reported to be a
conduit for the facilitation of high-risk behaviours (such
as drug-seeking). For example, Bourne et al. (2014)
reported that some men use Grindr to locate partners for
chemsex or party-and-play (PNP) sessions. Chemsex
and PNP refer to sex among MSM while using various
drugs, including methamphetamine, cocaine, gammahydroxybutyrate (GHB), gamma-butyrolactone (GBL)
and mephedrone. Grindr can also facilitate slamming
parties prolonged MSM sex parties that involve the
injection of illicit drugs (Frederick, 2015).
In addition to Grindr, there also exist numerous MSM
virtual social networks (VSNs) that feature a high
number of self-identified drug users.
This sort of social networking is best described as taking
place on VSNs, rather than online social networks, as
much communication takes place via smart phones and
tablets. VSNs can be categorised into static networks,
which are more permanent and may include user profiles
and terms of use (e.g. Facebook), and dynamic networks
(e.g. Skype or ooVoo video chat), which are temporary
and often by invitation only. A feature of VSNs is the
creative use of slang and argot to get around
moderation. Static (and especially) dynamic VSNs that
use webcams have been recently associated with
chemsex parties and/or slamming among MSM.
A few examples of MSM VSNs include PlanetRomeo.
com (a German-based VSN), which has at least 11
member-created drug-themed clubs; NastyKinkPigs.
com (a US-based VSN with members throughout the
United States, the United Kingdom and Europe), which
allows individuals to specify drug use preferences in
their member profiles; and Get2ThePoint (ynotmingle.
com), which describes itself as an online clubhouse for
Slamming enthusiasts (ynotmingle.com, 2015).
2ThePoint refers to the injection of methamphetamine
and/or mephedrone, in particular, as well as other drugs.
Unlike Get2ThePoint, PlanetRomeo and NastyKinkPigs
also have smartphone apps that employ location-based
technology.
Another recent trend among MSM drug users is the
online sharing of sexualised drug ingestion experiences
via real-time webcam broadcasts either on MSM
VSNs with webcam chat rooms, in group conference
calls (Skype or Zoom) or privately (Skype). MSM seeking
(1) See Grindr.com

webcam drug experiences can often locate other Skype


members and/or active Zoom conference calls through
services such as Google+ Communities.
Some MSM share their drug ingestion experiences by
uploading video content to video-sharing websites.
Gay pornography producer Treasure Island Media
maintains one such site, ToxxxicTube, which features
hundreds of user-uploaded videos of men apparently
smoking or injecting illicit drugs such as crystal
methamphetamine.
As well as sharing drug use experiences, there are
suggestions that sites may also facilitate drug supply. A
recent online article by Vice found that One of the most
common profile names or sub-headings on Grindr has
become GMTV which implies that the person is using,
has to share, or has to sell, G (GBL), M (mephedrone), T
(Tina AKA crystal meth) or V (Viagra). By using colloquial
slang for drugs, and using search fields on certain sites,
you can hunt for the drug youre after, or people who are
using it who might be willing to hook you up electronically
with someone wholl get some for you (Daly, 2015).

Using web analytical methods to


monitor drug use and markets

Recently, researchers have analysed social media data


using data mining techniques to explore the different
ways in which large numbers of social media data might
be processed and how social media analysis can provide
an additional source of data on drug use and markets.
Yakushev and Mityagin (2014) found that, through data
mining, the level of interest in drugs among the users of
these media could be determined. In addition, the
authors were able to obtain information on the interests
of individuals who had posted drug-related content. They
suggest that social media can provide a better picture of
those with light addiction problems than traditional
sources of data on drug use.
Web analytics have also been used by criminal justice
researchers to explore social media and drug supply.
One of these studies (Watters and Phair, 2012)
developed a new methodology known as Automated
Social Media Intelligence Analysis to analyse social
media platforms for the presence of drug buying and
selling. The search found many examples of sellers
advertising drugs and buyers requesting drugs on
social media. They also found that no examples of illicit
drug advertising were found among paid
advertisements.

119

The internet and drug markets

Social media policies, supply and


demand reduction responses

Owing to the large volume of drug-related social media


user content, the numerous and varied types of
environments in which such content is posted and a lack
of understanding about the impact of different types of
social media content, a comprehensive response to
drug-related social media content is not anticipated any
time soon. Although law enforcement agencies continue
to develop their practices to respond to evolving online
methods of drug supply, other stakeholders will be
important in tackling the negative impact of drug-related
social media content. For example, the policies and
practices of social media owners are under scrutiny,
particularly with respect to the monitoring of memberuser activities. The research world also has a role to play
in creating a better understanding of the impact of
different types of social media content on behaviour and
in developing methods of online social media monitoring.
In addition, researchers can use the opportunities
provided by increased online social contact to recruit
hitherto hidden research subjects. Similarly,
professionals in the prevention, harm reduction and
treatment fields need to develop their services to align
them better with todays digital modes of
communication.

Tackling the buying and selling of

drugs: law enforcement responses

According to numerous sources (e.g. grey literature,


news media reports, peer-reviewed journal articles), the
drug-related monitoring of social media by police and
other law enforcement entities does occur. However,
because of the sheer volume of data involved, the
automatic (or semi-automatic) screening of drug-related
social media content by law enforcement can often be
very tedious, making such operations difficult or even
impracticable (Watters and Phair, 2012). Moreover, the
results of such screenings often include false positives.
Where law enforcement monitoring does lead to arrests,
media reports suggest that they often involve young
people found with small amounts of illicit drugs and who
have little to no prior history of criminal behaviour, or
small-scale dealers who lack sophistication in their
operations (Knibbs, 2013; Storm, 2013; Chicoer, 2014;
Taylor, 2014).
An additional complication for law enforcement agencies
monitoring social media is that member-users often

120

employ special language when communicating about


drugs or drug-related activities and behaviours, as
described in the section on sites and apps for MSM. This
argot, or drug-related slang words, develops over time,
making it exceedingly difficult for those monitoring to
keep up with the changing use of language. This is
because the purpose of drug-related argot is to maintain
secrecy so as to hide subculture communications from
outsiders (Johnson et al., 2006), especially law
enforcement agents.
Some law enforcement actions are successful, though.
Some social media-related drug arrests concern the
illegal sale of prescription drugs (rather than the dealing
of illicit drugs). Others are made in conjunction with
larger sting operations. For example, an August 2013
Instagram-related gun bust sting operation in New York
City led to hundreds of arrests (the largest in NYC
history) and in April 2014 a large US-wide sting
operation (conducted by the US DEA and the FBI) led to
the arrest of more than 350 drug dealers, all of whom
had posted drug-related content on Instagram.

I Social media policies and practices


The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) recently
reported that most social media owners do not actively
monitor and/or remove drug-related content (BBC
Trending, 2013a). Some social media owners responded
to these accusations, citing reasons of impracticality or
invasiveness. Legal reasons were also cited. Others
claimed to take a reactive approach to the presence of
drug-related content on member-user pages. Typically,
social media owners give their member-users the
opportunity to report inappropriate or illegal content, and
some owners stress their commitment to reviewing such
reports within a short period of time, usually 48hours.
In a follow-up to its original investigative report, the BBC
noted that Instagram had responded by blocking
numerous drug-related hashtags on its site (BBC
Trending, 2013b). Still, many lay and professional
members of the public have demanded that Instagram
and other social media owner-operators take a more
proactive approach to removing drug-related and other
content of an illegal nature.

I Further research and monitoring


Research exploring the link between new forms of
media, in particular social media, and drug supply and

CHAPTER 12 ISocial media and drug markets

demand is still in its infancy. In particular, the extent of


drug supply through social media channels is
underexplored. Improved methods of monitoring online
social media content, possibly through web analytics,
and also research with drug users themselves will be
required to understand fully the role of online supply in
drug markets. Research needs to move beyond merely
identifying drug-related social media content to
assessing its impact on drug use behaviours.
There has been a growing acknowledgement of the need
to incorporate digital monitoring into drug monitoring
systems through the identification of drug-related
content on social media apps and sites. For example, the
University of Marylands Center for Substance Abuse
Research has been commissioned by the US National
Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) to run the National Drug
Early Warning System (NDEWS) for the next five years;
part of its role will be, for the first time, to collect data
from social media and web platforms in order to identify
emerging illicit drug trends. NIDA is also funding a
USD11million, three-year research programme to
explore the use of social media to improve our
understanding of drug use, addiction, prevention and
treatment(2).
As well as using social media to identify emerging trends
and understand drug use behaviours, some researchers
have used it to assess the impact of responses aimed at
reducing drug misuse. For example, McNaughton et al.
(2014) analysed social media to assess the impact of the
introduction of reformulated opioid analgesics designed
to prevent abuse. The European I-TREND project (see
Chapter10) also used social media to inform its online
monitoring of shops selling new psychoactive
substances, and Ledberg (2015) used internet forums to
explore interest in new psychoactive substances before
and after control.

I Demand reduction responses


Health services have been slow to adapt to changing
modes of communication and to develop new methods
of reaching target groups (EU Task Force on eHealth,
2012). Manning (2013) found some examples of official
drug prevention videos on YouTube, but, unlike other drug
videos, these did not allow user comments. Social media
engage users in conversations, and services, need to
adapt, moving away from one-way messaging to more
participatory approaches (Neiger et al., 2013). In the

(2) http://www.drugabuse.gov/news-events/news-releases/2014/10/
using-social-media-to-better-understand-prevent-treat-substance-use

absence of appropriately delivered services, other actors


will fill the void. Thus, forums may become the go-to place
for harm reduction advice, despite concerns about the
quality of the information provided. Analysis of forums
has identified demand for harm reduction and treatment
advice, particularly among users who may not feel
comfortable attending treatment services, such as
socially integrated recreational drug users. Social media
provide opportunities for engaging with hard-to-reach
client groups (Davey et al., 2012) and show similar levels
of use across ethnic groups. Targeted messaging using
demographic and other information (such as interest in
nightlife) may provide a cost-effective way of reaching the
right individuals and tailoring messages and responses to
their specific needs. In addition, social media can provide
opportunities for creating online communities that
support recovery from drug dependence.

I Conclusion
The growth of social media has revolutionised methods
of communication and affected the way we interact with
each other. In terms of the direct impact on drug
markets, there remains insufficient evidence of its role in
the supply of drugs. More vigilant controls by social
media owners, and greater clarity about their level of
responsibility for ensuring that services are not used to
facilitate criminal activity, may help to restrict drug
supply through these channels.
In terms of the indirect impact on drug markets in
relation to demand for drugs, the impact of increased
exposure to drug-related content online, particularly on
younger people, needs better exploration. This will not
only increase our understanding of how social media
influence behaviour but also allow us to target responses
to the areas with the greatest potential negative effects
and help us to design more appropriate responses. At
the same time, there is a need to have a balanced
approach to the issue, identifying and responding to the
negative aspects but also identifying ways in which
social media can be harnessed by the research and
monitoring community and prevention and treatment
agencies to better understand drug use and to improve
demand reduction responses.

I References
I

 BC Trending (2013a), Instagram blocks some drugs advert


B
tags after BBC probe, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/
technology-24842750

121

The internet and drug markets

 BC Trending (2013b), How drugs are offered on Instagram,


B
7/11/2013, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-24849537

 indham, N.F., Naicker, S., Freeman, B., McGeechan, K. and


B
Trevena, L. (2014), Apps promoting illicit drugs: a need for
tighter regulation?, Journal of Consumer Health on the
Internet 18(1), pp.3143.

 anson, C.L, Cannon, B., Burton, S. and Giraud-Carrier, C.


H
(2013b), An exploration of social circles and prescription drug
abuse through Twitter, Journal of Medical Internet Research
15(9), e189, doi:10.2196/jmir.2741

 ourne, A., Reid, D., Hickson, F. and Torres Rueda, S.W.P.


B
(2014), The chemsex study: drug use in sexual settings among
gay and bisexual men in Lambeth, Southwark and Lewisham,
Sigma Research, London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, London.

 offner, C., Plotkin, R., Buchanan, M., et al. (2006), The


H
third-person effect in perceptions of the influence of television
violence, Journal of Communication 51(2), pp.283299.

 olt, M. (2014), Sex, drugs, and HIV: lets avoid panic, The
H
Lancet HIV 1(1), e4e5.

 avazos-Rehg, P., Krauss, M., Grucza, R. and Bierut, L. (2014),


C
Characterizing the followers and tweets of a marijuanafocused twitter handle, Journal of Medical Internet Research
16(6), p 157, doi: 10.2196/jmir.3247

 ohnson, B.D., Bardhi, F., Sifaneck, S.J. and Dunlap, E. (2006),


J
Marijuana argot as subculture threads: social constructions
by users in New York City, British Journal of Criminology 46(1),
pp.4677.

 hiauzzi, E., Dasmahapatra, P., Lobo, K. and Barratt, M.J.


C
(2013), Participatory research with an online drug forum: a
survey of user characteristics, information sharing, and harm
reduction views, Substance Use and Misuse 48(8), pp.661
670.

 aplan, A.M. and Haenlein, M. (2010), Users of the world,


K
unite! The challenges and opportunities of social media,
Business Horizons 53(1), pp.5968.

 hicoer (2014), Six drug arrests in Chico, undercover


C
operation included social media, http://www.chicoer.com/
general-news/20141101/six-drug-arrests-in-chicoundercover-operation-included-social-media

 ingston, T. (2014), Italians enraged at rise of Sicilys new


K
Facebook mafia, The Telegraph, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
news/worldnews/europe/italy/11008060/Italians-enragedat-rise-of-Sicilys-new-Facebook-mafia.html

 nibbs, K. (2013), Meet social medias drug dealers, also


K
known as the stupidest people on the internet, http://www.
digitaltrends.com/social-media/selling-drugs-on-socialmedia-the-stupidest-people-on-the-internet-vol-1/

 ange, J.E., Daniel, J., Homer, K., Reed, M.B. and Clapp, J.D.
L
(2010), Salvia divinorum: effects and use among YouTube
users, Drug and Alcohol Dependence 108(1), pp.138140.

 au, A., Gabarron, E., Fernandez-Luque, L. and Armayones, M.


L
(2012), Social media in health: what are the safety concerns
for health consumers?, Health Information Management
Journal 41(2), p.30.

 edberg, A. (2015), The interest in eight new psychoactive


L
substances before and after scheduling, Drug and Alcohol
Dependence 152, pp.7378.

 ivingstone, S., lafsson, K. and Staksrud, E. (2013), Risky


L
social networking practices among underage users: lessons
for evidence based policy, Journal of Computer Mediated
Communication 18(3), pp.303320.

 cNaughton, E.C., Coplan, P. M., Black, R.A., et al. (2014),


M
Monitoring of internet forums to evaluate reactions to the
introduction of reformulated OxyContin to deter abuse,
Journal of Medical Internet Research 16(5), e119, doi:
10.2196/jmir.3397

 andiberg, M. (ed.) (2012), The social media reader, NYU


M
Press, New York, pp. 110.

 anning, P. (2013), YouTube, drug videos and drugs


M
education, Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 20(2),
pp.120130.

 eal, M. (2014), The Leafly App is like Grindr for weed, http://
N
motherboard.vice.com/blog/the-leafly-app-is-like-grindr-forweed

 aly, M. (2015), The future of drugs according to Vice, http://


D
www.vice.com/en_uk/read/the-future-of-drugs-max-dalyaccording-to-vice-531

 avey, Z., Schifano, F., Corazza, O. and Deluca, P. (2012),


D
e-Psychonauts: conducting research in online drug forum
communities, Journal of Mental Health 21, pp.386394.

 rugabuse.com (2014), Drug dealer profiles on Instagram,


D
http://drugabuse.com/featured/instagram-drug-dealers/

 uffy, M., Schaefer, N., Coomber, R., OConnell, L. and Turnbull,


D
P.J. (2008), Cannabis supply and young people Its a
social thing, Joseph Rowntree Foundation, York.

 uropean Commission (2014), Young people and drugs: Flash


E
Eurobarometer 401.

 U Task Force on eHealth (2012), Redesigning health in


E
Europe for 2020, http://www.e-health-com.eu/fileadmin/
user_upload/dateien/Downloads/redesigning_health-eufor2020-ehtf-report2012_01.pdf

 orsyth, A.J. (2012), Virtually a drug scare: mephedrone and


F
the impact of the Internet on drug news transmission,
International Journal of Drug Policy 23(3), pp.198209.

 rederick, B.J. (2015), Slam camming: exploring the link


F
between men-for-men drug pornography and the emergence
of webcam drug use among gay and queer men, Annual
Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Washington,
DC.

I
I

122

Journal of Medical Internet Research 15(4), e62, doi: 10.2196/


jmir.2741

Get2ThePoint (2015), http://ynotmingle.com/


 anson, C.L., Burton, S.H., Giraud-Carrier, C., et al. (2013a),
H
Tweaking and tweeting: exploring Twitter for nonmedical use
of a psychostimulant drug (Adderall) among college students,

CHAPTER 12 ISocial media and drug markets

 eiger, B.L., Thackeray, R., Burton, S.H., Giraud-Carrier, C.G.


N
and Fagen, M.C. (2013), Evaluating social medias capacity to
develop engaged audiences in health promotion settings: use
of Twitter metrics as a case study, Health Promotion and
Practice 14, pp.157162.

Nielsen (2012), State of the media: the social media report


2012, http://www.nielsen.com/us/en/insights/reports/2012/
state-of-the-media-the-social-media-report-2012.html

 Neill, P.H. (2013), Teens on Tumblr cant stop bragging


O
about Silk Road drug deals, http://www.dailydot.com/crime/
tumblr-teens-silk-road-drug-deals/

 aul, B., Salwen, M.B. and Dupagne, M. (2007), The third


P
person effect: a meta-analysis of the perceptual hypothesis, in
Preiss, R., Gayle, B., Burrell, N., et al. (eds), mass media effects
research: advances through meta-analysis, Lawrence
Erlbaum, Mahway, New Jersey, pp.81102.

 chils, N. and Pauwels, L. (2013), Explaining violent


S
extremism: the role of new social media, European Society of
Criminology 2013 Conference abstracts. Available at: https://
biblio.ugent.be/publication/4147823

 olis, B. (2015), The Conversation Prism: Version 4, https://


S
conversationprism.com/

 oussan, C. and Kjellgren, A. (2014), Harm reduction and


S
knowledge exchange: a qualitative analysis of drug-related
Internet discussion forums, Harm Reduction Journal 11, p.25.

 torm, D. (2013), Busted! Cops arrest teenager after she


S
posted a picture of pot on Instagram, http://www.

computerworld.com/article/2474831/data-privacy/busted-cops-arrest-teenager-after-she-posted-a-picture-of-pot-oninstagram.html

 aylor, V. (2014), Facebook him! Florida man arrested after


T
posting drug-related selfie. 10/5/2014, http://www.
nydailynews.com/news/crime/florida-man-arrested-postingdrug-related-selfie-article-1.1787366

 andoninck, S., dHaenens, L. and Roe, K. (2013), Online risks:


V
coping strategies of less resilient children and teenagers
across Europe, Journal of Children and Media 7(1), pp.6078.

 alsh, C. (2011), Drugs, the Internet and change, Journal of


W
Psychoactive Drugs 43(1), pp.5563.

 atters, P. A. and Phair, N. (2012), Detecting illicit drugs on


W
social media using automated social media intelligence
analysis (ASMIA), in Cyberspace Safety and Security,
Springer, Berlin and Heidelberg, pp.6676.

 akushev, A. and Mityagin, S. (2014), Social networks mining


Y
for analysis and modeling drugs usage, Procedia Computer
Science 29, pp.24622471.

 eng, D., Chen, H., Lusch, R. and Li, S.H. (2010), Social media
Z
analytics and intelligence, Intelligent Systems 25(6), pp.13
16.

 heleva, E. and Getoor, L. (2009), To join or not to join: the


Z
illusion of privacy in social networks with mixed public and
private user profiles, in Proceedings of the 18th international
conference on World Wide Web, ACM, New York, pp.531540.

123

IV

SECTION IV

Insights and implications

CHAPTER 13

What is the future for internet drug markets?


125

13

CHAPTER 13

What is the future for internet drug


markets?
Jane Mounteney, Paul Griffiths and Liesbeth Vandam

I Introduction

I Drivers of change

In gathering together contributions from a variety of


experts in the field, this publication has sought to set out
what is known about the nature and functioning of drug
markets on the internet with a view to enhancing our
understanding of their current and potential importance
as a source of supply for illicit drugs. At the time of
writing and reflected in the balance of contributions to
this publication, there is noticeably more academic
interest in, and output on, the functioning of drug
marketplaces in the deep web, an area that has
witnessed rapid growth since 2010. Given the diversity
and complexity of surface web markets, operating
across a diffuse internet landscape, it is particularly
difficult to map their structure and functioning. The
constant and rapid evolution of social media sites and
apps both offer an entry to online markets and represent
additional platforms where drugs are discussed and
offered for sale.

A wide range of factors appear to be driving change and


development in internet drug markets, mostly linked to
technology, globalisation and market innovation. Digital
literacy and knowledge are increasing and thereby
expanding the pool of potential market users. The
technology is clearly important, and new developments
are changing how we interact both commercially and
socially across the board. Developments in encryption,
digital currencies and anonymous browsing are among
the technologies driving change in dark net markets. We
also note the influence of marketing innovations, for
example the establishment of the deep web search
engine GRAMS. This search engine for Tor-based dark
net markets allows users to search multiple markets for
products such as drugs and guns from a simple search
interface.

Despite evidence of drug selling on both the surface and


the deep web, the size and scale of these markets is far
from clear. We have reasonably good descriptions of
dark net markets, less so for surface web markets, but
overall there is little evidence on the relative importance
of online markets as a source of supply. With regard to
those substances for which there is some legal
ambiguity or regulatory loophole, the majority of sales
appear to take place on the surface web. By contrast, the
majority of sales activity linked to illicit drugs appears to
take place on the deep web. Although the online sale of
fake and counterfeit medicines represents a major
global enterprise, at present, evidence of sourcing of
medicines for the illicit drug market from online
pharmacies is slim. We note that more information on
the online sales of new psychoactive substances and
research chemicals is now emerging, with some
evidence of overlap with illicit markets, via so-called grey
marketplaces.

As discussed in Chapter 3, Tor is the largest and bestknown onion router network, offering a level of
anonymity that has made it a popular tool among
internet users wishing to avoid government or corporate
censorship and/or to engage in illicit activities online.
One of the challenges associated with private browsing
can be its speed, and this is an area where technology is
driving innovation. In a recent paper, Chen et al. (2015)
describe their development of a new anonymising
network called HORNET (High-speed Onion Routing at
the NETwork layer), which is an onion-routing network
that could be the next generation of anonymising
technology.
Recent years have witnessed a global and exponential
growth in e-commerce across the board and, in some
respects, recent trends in the growth of online drug
marketplaces may merely reflect this broader social
phenomenon. In this context, the rapid development of
easy online payment systems has been a major
facilitator of new developments. Nevertheless, at
present, e-commerce is still dwarfed by traditional

127

The internet and drug markets

modes of commerce and, despite online shopping


having seen a massive increase, data on 2014 retail
sales (direct to the final consumer) show a European
average of 7.2%(1). By analogy, it is not unreasonable to
assume that, at present, most transactions in the sphere
of illicit drug supply still take place in offline markets, and
will probably continue to do so for some time.

can be assumed that the deep web is growing


exponentially at a rate that cannot be quantified (2). By
comparison, the part of the web accessible to traditional
search engines, the clear or surface web, is estimated to
be fairly small. Cryptomarkets or dark net markets
represent only a minuscule element, in terms of the
space they take up, of the deep web.

Social and cultural dynamics have also been a central


feature in the rise of dark net markets. Reports highlight
the charismatic figures involved in running marketplaces,
such as Ross Ulbricht, Silk Roads Dread Pirate Roberts.
In the early iterations of cryptomarkets such as Silk
Road, there was an emphasis on the value given to
participation in online communities of like-minded
people, and the importance of online activism.
Undoubtedly, an additional major driver of public interest
in, and use of, these dark net markets has been the
widespread media reporting, bringing them to the
attention of a new audience. Buxton and Bingham
(2015) suggest that as a result of a combination of
factors including expanding internet access, a
tech-savvy generation, new security tools,
cryptocurrencies and sustained international demand
for drugs the expansion of dark net markets is likely to
continue.

There is also some differentiation between the


availability of products in surface and deep web markets.
It is estimated that, for medicines and new psychoactive
substances, most online drug market transactions are
likely to take place on the surface web, via online shops
and pharmacies, but also via classified ads and research
chemical websites. Medicines and new psychoactive
substances are available on dark net markets, but sale of
illicit drugs is more common on these platforms. Soska
and Christin (2015) note that around 70% of all sales on
the sites they were monitoring were of cannabis, ecstasy
and cocaine-related products. Heroin, other opioids and
new psychoactive substances were also available for
sale.

The deep web represents the largest part of the internet,


incorporating as it does all elements stored in
databases, private networks, unlinked sites and hidden
services. It is impossible to measure, and hard to
estimate, the size of the deep web because the majority
of the information is hidden or locked inside databases.
Early estimates suggested that the deep web was 400 to
550 times larger than the surface web. However, since
more information and sites are always being added, it

A further area of uncertainty is at what level of the


market online transactions take place, particularly those
made on the deep web. In Chapter8, Joost van Slobbe
argues that, if a European organised criminal group
wished to order a large consignment of heroin or
cocaine, there would necessarily be face-to-face contact
between representatives of the supplying and receiving
criminal organisations. Martin (2013), however, suggests
that dark net markets open up the possibility of a direct
link between drug-using buyers and producers or
synthesisers of illicit drugs, and may eventually serve to
cut out some of the middle level of the market. In
Chapter2, Aldridge and Dcary-Htu suggest that direct
produceruser transactions are more likely for the kinds
of drugs where small-scale producers can operate
without large-scale international networks (e.g. cannabis,
mushrooms, NBOMe). They highlight the fact that a
substantial proportion of dark net market customers are
buying in bulk, probably sourcing stock to sell offline and
thereby making these markets the very location of the
middle market for certain products. Dollivers analysis
(2015) suggests that only a small minority of vendor
accounts may have connections to more sophisticated
criminal groups or upper-level retailers markets and that
the majority are opportunistic vendors. Soska and
Christin (2015) note that the vast majority of vendors in
their study earned less than USD10000 over the
three-year monitoring period, concluding that these
markets are primarily competing with street dealers in
the retail space. Taken together, this evidence suggests

(1) http://www.retailresearch.org/onlineretailing.php

(2) Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_web_%28search%29

The internet and drug markets:

mapping and market demarcation

With regard to the size and segmentation of drug


markets on the internet, some issues have become
clearer. First, there are a number of different but
overlapping online drug markets, although the relative
size of the various markets is hard to quantify. An
approximate demarcation can be made between
markets open to all on the clear or surface web; markets
that are not accessible to traditional browsers on the
deep web; and actively concealed and anonymised dark
net markets or cryptomarkets.

128

CHAPTER 13 IWhat is the future for internet drug markets?

that dark net markets are linked with criminal innovation


and a new breed of entrepreneurial drug dealer engaging
in what could be described as disorganised crime.

I Online versus offline drug markets


The internet offers a relatively open and global virtual
marketplace, in contrast to the closed networks of
dealers and buyers more recently associated with the
use of mobile phone technology. From the perspective of
the seller, Silk Road has been described as a paradigm
shifting, transformative criminal innovation, as it
provided drug dealers with a range of new opportunities
and potential benefits compared with offline markets.
The gain: an expanded market for their products; the
capacity to sell to customers not already known to them;
and the ability to trade anonymously and in a relatively
low-risk environment (Aldridge and Dcary-Htu, 2014).
Online marketplaces may also offer the benefit of
increased personal safety (buyer and seller) and reduce
the possibility of violence, as buyers and sellers never
reveal their identities and never meet face to face.
Improved product quality (purity, price, type of product)
and reduced risk of detection have also been cited as
perceived advantages in studies. Nevertheless, there
appears to be a relatively high risk of financial scamming
in both online and street markets.
In terms of the number of transactions or heaviness of
traffic, commerce on dark net markets is estimated by
commentators to be a fraction of all drug commerce,
with the bulk of illicit activity still likely to take place
using offline communication. It seems reasonable to
suggest, however, that this situation will not necessarily
remain the case for long. Revenues are very hard to
estimate. According to Christin (2014), the billion-dollar
amounts alleged in the criminal complaint regarding the
shutdown of Silk Road in October 2013 (Barratt et al.,
2014) are highly inflated as a result of erroneous
conversion rates between bitcoins and US dollars. In
their more recent study, Soska and Christin (2015)
suggest that total volumes of sales during the three
years they were monitoring dark web markets averaged
around USD300000 to USD500000 a day.

I Global versus national markets


Although the internet offers a virtual global marketplace,
with the increased accessibility this brings, geographical
place remains important to buyers and sellers. It appears
that selling internationally is not the norm. Although

internet markets have global reach, national


characteristics still have a significant impact. Many
buyers prefer home sellers, perceiving less risk with
fewer borders to cross. It appears that most US and
Australian vendors on Silk Road were not willing to ship
drugs across international borders, and Australian
buyers preferred local sellers. After Silk Road closed, a
new Finnish marketplace was established on the deep
web to cater for national customers. Exceptions include
when overseas markets provide access to different
products or higher-quality goods or offer price
advantages to buyers and sellers. Sellers may run the
increased risk of shipping products abroad when there is
a lot of competition on the home market or where the
home market is considered unsafe or vulnerable to
police infiltration.
Results presented by the I-TREND project team in
Chapter 10 show that the preference for national
markets also holds true for new psychoactive
substances sales. Although online shops may target two
or more countries, it is more likely that an online shop will
be aimed at one country and has logistical operations in
the same country. This finding suggests that the
distribution of online shops among different categories
could be related to cultural factors; product choices also
appear to be linked, to some extent, to country and
cultural preferences for particular substances.
Finally, there are evidently certain global trends
expressed within local online subcultures or
communities. These loosely affiliated groups may centre
on discussion forums or social media sites. Many deep
web markets do not operate in isolation, but tend to be
accompanied by user forums and discussion boards
which allow peer-to-peer information and expertise
exchange and contact. This publication has identified, for
example, virtual social networks of men who have sex
with men engaging in chemsex; the early Silk Road
libertarian community; the product-testing LSD
Avengers; and forums for psychonauts exploring the
effects of research chemicals and new psychoactive
substances.

Security measures and regulatory


mechanisms

A central challenge for dark net markets is the instability


associated with their functioning. This is primarily a
reaction to threats of market disruption from external
sources, in particular law enforcement infiltration, but
also to internal scams and risks. As highlighted within

129

The internet and drug markets

this publication, these marketplaces are relatively


transitory and unstable entities. They are also unique in
particular in the combination of a number of security
measures that increase possibilities for relative
anonymity: the use of cryptocurrencies (bitcoin),
encryption (PGP) and secure web hosting (Tor). They
also tend to integrate a set of regulatory mechanisms to
support financial security: escrow services, reputation
and feedback systems, use of digital contracts (e.g.
Alphabay) and dispute adjudication. Finally, in order to
try and ensure safe delivery of goods, stealth packaging
is used to conceal products.
Market trader scams and police takedowns also act as a
catalyst for new security developments. New markets
have sought to combat rogue operators through the use
of multi-signature escrow, which requires a second key
from the buyer or seller to access the money.
Increasingly, sites are not open access but require
invitation from a member and the use of a guest code or
URL. In Chapter3, Lewman suggests how markets are
likely to further evolve in a bid to evade law enforcement
infiltration, with the decentralised OpenBazaar
marketplace offering a potential model. This involves
distributing the transactions of the e-commerce
software throughout all participants in the market using
the basics of the bitcoin block chain. This creates the
potential for a fully distributed marketplace spread
across millions of computers around the globe, with
each computer handling only a part of the marketplace,
and leaving no single server vulnerable to takedown.

T rafficking and supply reduction


challenges

An important question raised in this publication is the


extent to which the internet provides new criminal
opportunities for drug trafficking. As discussed above,
there are certainly indications that, in some
circumstances, dark net markets may be used more by
suppliers for wholesale purchasing than by consumers
at a retail level. The extent of involvement of organised
crime in online drug markets is unclear at present.
However, if online drug trading offers significant threats
or opportunities, there will undoubtedly be a presence. In
Chapter8, Van Slobbe makes an interesting point on this
subject: currently, the percentage of the drug trade that
takes place on the dark net is too limited to affect the
profits of the larger organised criminal groups. However,
if cryptomarket turnover and profit potential were to rise
substantially, then organised crime would undoubtedly
enter the marketplaces. Given that criminal groups

130

already use private servers and protected networks for


communicating within the group, a move into deep web
markets represents no technological challenge.
Although marketing and sales activities may take place
online, in terms of trafficking flows there remains a
physical component in internet drug-dealing activities,
primarily at the cultivation/production stage and at the
distribution stage (e.g. postal systems may be involved).
Criminals are exploiting legal loopholes, for example
taking advantage of differences in national regulation.
Postal systems are seen as the major bottleneck of the
system, as the substances sold still need to be delivered
through the (inter)national mail system. We note the
growth of stealth packaging in this context and the
fact that online suppliers reputations are linked to their
creativity in concealing purchases.
This publication highlights a number of conundrums for
law enforcement: their activity, for example, in infiltrating
and taking down markets on the deep web can have
undesirable effects. This includes both the balloon
effect, in terms of scattering market activity, and the
driving of more sophisticated encryption software and
concealment activities. It is also interesting to consider
what drug sources online markets replace and, if internet
markets are closed, removed or seized, what drug
sources people use instead.

I The buyers perspective


A number of studies cited in this publication have
explored reasons why experienced drug users choose to
use online drug markets rather than conventional
sources of supply. Among this population, recurrent
themes include easy accessibility, availability of their
drugs of choice and good quality of products. Main
factors hindering use include the need for a certain level
of technical competence and fear of financial scams.
The 2015 Global Drug Survey provides further insight on
this issue with an analysis of respondents who reported
making web purchases of drugs (3). These results shed
light on buyers considerations when comparing
purchasing drugs in dark net markets with buying from
alternative sources. Respondents were asked to report
the problems they had experienced both with dark net
markets and with the alternative sources of drugs that
they would use if they did not have access to those sites.

(3) Available at http://www.globaldrugsurvey.com/the-global-drugsurvey-2015-findings/

CHAPTER 13 IWhat is the future for internet drug markets?

The results show that buyers found the dark net to be


safer than their alternative sources in terms of fewer
experiences of threats and violence. They were also less
likely to experience receiving products not containing the
expected substance. However, dark net users were more
likely to report losing money as a result of theft, seizure
of drugs by authorities or exit scams, in which site
administrators disappear with money being held in
escrow on their sites.

I Harm reduction opportunities


In addition to supporting drug markets, both the surface
and deep web offer new ways for drug users to access
help, and potentially to reduce barriers to help seeking.
There exist drug user harm reduction communities
through drug forums on the surface web. These, for
example, circulate warnings about pills with dangerous
content, and the sharing of information in forums could
potentially deter users from buying certain drugs.
Studies presented here on Silk Road suggest this dark
net market offered certain benefits to users when
compared with street-based drug marketplaces.
Examples include the abovementioned sale of highquality products with low risk for contamination, vendortested products, trip reporting and online discussions on
harm reduction with resources for people who wish to
reduce their consumption (Barratt et al., 2013; Van Hout
and Bingham, 2013, 2014). Barratt et al. conclude that
Silk Road contributed positively to harm reduction, by
helping users to make informed decisions and enabling
them to access relevant information more
comprehensive than was available elsewhere. DoctorX
provides harm reduction advice at point of sale and, in
Chapter7, gives concrete examples of his work with dark
net market users offering drug-related information,
advice and harm reduction services. Nevertheless, the
rapid turnover of markets make them an insecure
longer-term platform, and the limited number of dark net
marketplaces in existence means the space for largescale input from web outreach workers and health
service personnel is probably limited.

despite their associations with secrecy, it seems that,


from a research perspective, these markets are a
relatively visible phenomenon. In many respects, we now
have more information than was previously available on
illicit drug markets, and covering many angles. The
existence of a defined marketplace, Silk Road, has
assisted with this. As dark net markets become more
decentralised and diffuse, they will undoubtedly become
more difficult to monitor, research and understand. In
fact, the current challenges associated with monitoring
the complex surface web markets demonstrate this. And
important questions remain. Does the monitoring of
online shops and the products they offer actually reflect
what is available to users on the market? In this respect,
it is important to bear in mind that the offer of drugs for
sale does not necessarily equate with supply in these
online markets and that, from a research perspective,
the association between offer and availability is not
known. Potential rich sources of information are drug
user forums, which have the ability to provide insight into
what substances are being used by whom. It is possible
that enhanced monitoring in this area may better predict
and inform about market changes and trends. Like online
markets themselves, drug forums provide access to a
larger population of drug users than was previously
accessible to researchers. The qualitative information
gained from these forums can be rich in itself and can
also inform further quantitative research.
A range of new methodological issues arise with regard
to researching the web. In some respects, this opens up
the potential for a golden age of ethnographic research,
accompanied by innovative developments in online
research methodologies such as netnography and
infodemiology. It also brings with it the requirement for
new ethical considerations, as highlighted by I-TRENDs
forum monitoring. The recent opening up for public use
of a database of over 80 dark net markets by Gwern
Branwen(4) has increased substantially the potential
opportunities for academic research and understanding
of dark net markets. It is likely that this will be a rich
source for studies in future years.

I Questions for future research


I Researching online markets
As pointed out by Aldridge and Dcary-Htu in
Chapter2, our understanding of internet drug markets
has to a large extent been informed by investigative
journalists and bloggers, with the body of academic
research literature, at least in the area of dark net
markets, lagging somewhat behind. Nevertheless,

Throughout this publication, authors have raised issues


that they consider to be important for future research. In
a number of areas, the absence of a body of scientific
evidence hampers our ability to make valid conclusions
on market dynamics and function. This is particularly
true for the online sale of medicinal products and for our
(4) http://www.gwern.net/Black-market%20survival

131

The internet and drug markets

understanding of the role of social media and apps in the


demand for and supply of illicit substances. At present,
there is very limited evidence on the role of social media
in drug supply, and the limited knowledge and vastness
of social media platforms suggest that this is an
important area for further study.

Latest market trends and developments

A number of relevant queries have been raised about


drug markets. Above all else, markets are rational entities
and a central question raised by the evidence is whether
or not online markets (all types) are challenging
established ones and, if so, where they have a
competitive advantage. Christin (2014) asks whether
deep web markets primarily displace drug purchases
from traditional markets or provide access to drugs for
those without previous access. It is also important to get
a better understanding of how the online offer of drugs
affects use and consequences. Do people purchase
more when they buy online and what effect does that
have on use? The impact may differ for different types of
drug user and for different substances; for some
substances, such as new psychoactive substances, the
internet may have played a central role in the evolution
of the trade. Exploring its impact may contribute to a
wider understanding of the factors that impact on drug
markets.

was launched on 6November2013. On

There is also clearly a need to better understand the net


harm/benefit of dark net markets. In particular, as some
commentators suggest, the extent to which harm might
actually be reduced by dark net markets requires
systematic empirical research.
From the perspective of drug supply, it is interesting to
further assess whether or not the individuals who sell on
dark net markets fit the same profile as street dealers. Or
are drug vendors on the deep web, the so-called new
criminal entrepreneurs, completely different from street
dealers? Or have street dealers switched to the online
markets and, if so, what advantages did they expect and
gain from this switch?
We can ask similar questions about the buyers. Did the
people who are now buying drugs over the deep web
previously buy drugs in the traditional way, or did they
start buying drugs because of the ease of buying them
over the deep web, which entails fewer risks? Is the
profile of these buyers similar to the profile of drug
buyers in the traditional market?

As is now well known, in October 2013, the FBI shut


down the original Silk Road and arrested its
founder, Ross Ulbricht, known as Dread Pirate
Roberts. A new version of Silk Road (Silk Road2.0)
6November2014, Interpol announced the closing
down of 400 deep web sites, including Silk
Road2.0. However, the number of sites detected
had almost returned to previous levels by April
2015. Other websites have been closing down
since, supposedly trying to evade arrest, and taking
the bitcoin money stored in their accounts (5). The
most well-known instance was the disappearance
of the Evolution marketplace; in March 2015, the
administrators of this site disappeared with the
equivalent of more than USD12million
(GBP8million). In May 2015, Ross Ulbricht was
sentenced to life in prison in the United States, and
ordered to forfeit USD183million. In August 2015,
Agora ceased trading due to security issues; at the
time, it was the largest marketplace trading on the
deep web.

I Conclusions
This analysis has highlighted a number of significant new
trends in the fast-changing world of internet drug markets.
Authors in this publication highlight a tendency towards
decentralisation of dark net market structures and
activities. Dark net markets are seeing a move to more
covert communication and sophisticated encryption
techniques, in part as a response to the cat-and-mouse
game of avoiding detection by law enforcement. Similarly,
we have noted the growth of multi-signature escrow and
rating systems to try and ensure financial trust and
security for buyers in the wake of recent scams.
The internet facilitates movement of products, money and
information across global borders. It also allows the
movement of drugs, new psychoactive substances,
precursors, medicines and information on production
techniques. Social media play a role in facilitating
interaction, advertising and marketing drugs, in addition to
providing sales forums, shop access via apps, and

(5) See https://www.deepdotweb.com/2013/10/28/updated-llist-ofhidden-marketplaces-tor-i2p/

132

CHAPTER 13 IWhat is the future for internet drug markets?

classified ads. The dividing line between surface websites


(e.g. selling so-called legal highs) and cryptomarkets
seems to be increasingly blurred, as one level can
increasingly provide access to another. At present, the
extent of internet-enabled drug transactions taking place
on the deep web is very limited; however, growth has been
exponential and there is no evidence to suggest these
markets will remain restricted for long. Online new
psychoactive substance markets and dark net markets
have certain things in common. Both are extremely
dynamic and characterised by the closing and opening of
new sites. In both surface and dark net markets, suppliers
may use strategies that promote maximum internet
visibility for example through spamdexing practices,
which help them to appear at the top of search engine
results or, alternatively, they may choose a discreet,
targeted presence often using argot.
In Chapter 2, Aldridge and Dcary-Htu explain how in
recent years many drug markets have moved from open
to closed, in which drug dealers sell only to those
customers with whom they have trusted relationships.
They describe how dark net markets have reversed this
trend, opening up marketplaces that allow sellers to
transact with anonymous customers whom they only
meet in the virtual sphere (Aldridge, 2012; Aldridge and
Dcary-Htu, 2014). We would suggest that, after a brief
period of operation, recent trends suggest that dark net
markets may once again be moving from open to at least
partially closed as a result of scams and takedowns. This
has been manifested in the recent restrictions placed on
market entry, such as the need for invitation from an
existing member. Another sign of market closure has
been cited: in some cases, users have formed
relationships with their favourite suppliers, enabling
them to make private transactions via secured email,
bypassing the dark net markets altogether.
To date, it appears that buyers and sellers adjust rather
easily to dark net market takedowns, in a similar way to
buyers and sellers using surface web stores: when one
shop closes, others quickly appear to replace them. This
resilience to both law enforcement takedowns and exit
scams is also noted by Soska and Christin (2015).
However, as noted, most dark net markets tend to have a
fairly short life, with their longevity hampered more by
scams than by law enforcement intervention. The
longer-term impact on buyer trust and vendor reputation
may yet slow down or stall what, to date, has been
exponential growth. Nevertheless, as highlighted by Van
Buskirk et al. (2013), the speed with which the internet
allows transformation to occur in drug markets will
continue to present major challenges across the board,
to law enforcement, public health and research and
monitoring agencies.

I References
I

 ldridge, J. (2012), Dealers in disguise: the virtualisation of


A
retail level drugs markets, http://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=q4ZsNuC2kqg

 ldridge, J. and Dcary-Htu, D. (2014), Not an eBay for


A
drugs: the cryptomarket Silk Road as a paradigm shifting
criminal innovation. Available at: http://ssrn.com/
abstract=2436643 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/
ssrn.2436643

 arratt, M.J., Ferris, J.A. and Winstock, A.R. (2014), Use of


B
Silk Road, the online drug marketplace, in the United Kingdom,
Australia and the United States, Addiction 109, pp.774783.

 arratt, M.J., Lenton, S. and Allen, M. (2013), Internet content


B
regulation, public drug websites and the growth in hidden
Internet services, Drugs: Education, Prevention, and Policy 20,
pp.195202.

 uxton J. and Bingham T. (2015), The rise and challenge of


B
dark net drug markets, Policy Brief 7, Global Drug Policy
Observatory, http://www.swansea.ac.uk/media/The%20
Rise%20and%20Challenge%20of%20Dark%20Net%20
Drug%20Markets.pdf

 hen, C., Asoni, D.E., Barrera, D., Danezis, G. and Perrig, A.


C
(2015), HORNET: high-speed onion routing at the network
layer, cryptography and security, http://arxiv.org/
pdf/1507.05724v1.pdf

 hristin, N. (2014), Commentary on Barratt et al. (2014): steps


C
towards characterizing online anonymous drug marketplace
customers, Addiction 109, pp.784785.

 olliver, D.S. (2015), Evaluating drug trafficking on the Tor


D
Network: Silk Road2.0, the sequel, International Journal of
Drug Policy 26, pp. 11131123.

 artin, J. (2013). Lost on the Silk Road: online drug


M
distribution and the cryptomarket, Criminology and Criminal
Justice 14, pp. 351367.

 oska, K. and Christin, N. (2015), Measuring the longitudinal


S
evolution of the online anonymous marketplace ecosystem,
Proceedings of the 24th USENIX Security Symposium,
1214August2015, Washington DC, https://www.usenix.org/
system/files/conference/usenixsecurity15/sec15-papersoska.pdf

 an Buskirk, J., Roxburgh, A., Bruno, R. and Burns, L. (2013),


V
Drugs and the Internet (No. 1), NIDIP Bulletin, National Drug
and Alcohol Research Centre, Sydney, pp. 111.

 an Hout, M.C. and Bingham, T. (2013), Surfing the Silk


V
Road: a study of users experiences, International Journal of
Drug Policy 24, pp.524529.

 an Hout, M.C. and Bingham, T. (2014), Responsible vendors,


V
intelligent consumers: Silk Road, the online revolution in drug
trading, International Journal of Drug Policy 25, pp. 183189.

133

I Glossary
Block chain is a transaction database shared by all nodes
participating in a system based on the bitcoin protocol. A
full copy of a currencys block chain contains every
transaction ever executed in the currency. https://en.
bitcoin.it/wiki/Block_chain
Chemsex refers to sex while on various drugs, such as
mephedrone, methamphetamine, cocaine; slamming
refers to the injection of these and other drugs by gay
men/men who have sex with men in the context of chem
sex parties.
Cryptomarkets are anonymous drug markets located in
the dark web and accessed via Tor (see later). A
cryptomarket can be defined as an online forum where
goods and services are exchanged between parties who
use digital encryption to conceal their identities. It is not
necessarily a site for the commission of cybercrime, as
legal exchanges may also be conducted in such a forum
(Martin, 2013, p.356).
The dark web or dark net may be defined as a small
portion of the deep web that has been intentionally
hidden and is inaccessible through standard web
browsers. This is the portion of the internet most widely
known for illicit activities, because of the anonymity
associated with this network.

libertarian ideology. He was arrested following the


shutting down of the website by the FBI in October 2013.
He has been found guilty of several drug and criminal
charges and was sentenced to life in prison in 2015.
An eepsite is a website hosted anonymously via I2P.
Escrow is a financial instrument held by a third party on
behalf of the other two parties in a transaction. The funds
are held by the escrow service until it receives the
appropriate written or oral instructions or until obligations
have been fulfilled. Securities, funds and other assets can
be held in escrow.
Fiat currency is currency that a government has declared
to be legal tender, but which is not backed by a physical
commodity. The value of fiat money is derived from the
relationship between supply and demand rather than the
value of the material that the money is made of.
Garlic routing is a variant of onion routing that encrypts
multiple messages together to make it more difficult for
attackers to perform traffic analysis. Garlic routing is one
of the key factors that distinguishes I2P from Tor and
other privacy or encryption networks.
Hidden services are a feature provided by the Tor Browser
that enables a user to anonymously host and browse
content and services within a vast address space.

The deep web is a part of the internet not accessible to


conventional search engines; the only way to access the
deep web is by conducting a search within a particular
website; for example, government databases and libraries
contain huge numbers of deep web data.

Internet forums are online discussion sites where people


can hold conversations in the form of posted messages.
Their structure is hierarchical: a forum can contain
different sub-forums dedicated to different themes
covering several topics or threads.

A distributed hash table (DHT) is a class of decentralised


distributed system that provides a look-up service similar
to a hash table; (key, value) pairs are stored in a DHT, and
any participating node can efficiently retrieve the value
associated with a given key.

The Invisible Internet Project (I2P) is an alternative to Tor


hidden services. It is an overlay network based on passing
messages between routers using garlic routing with a
distributed hash table for a global directory of available
routers. All users of I2P are also running routers to pass
encrypted traffic between other routers. A few
cryptomarkets have recently started to use I2P as an
alternative to Tor hidden services (ONeill, 2013).

Doxing is the internet-based practice of researching and


broadcasting personally identifiable information about an
individual. This is a practice that drug sellers on the deep
web can use to coerce or blackmail customers once they
have obtained personal information (e.g. postal address)
to make the shipment. At this point in the transaction,
buyers have no guarantee that sellers will delete their data
once the deal has been finalised.
Dread Pirate Roberts is the pseudonym used by Ross
Ulbricht, alleged founder and former owner of the first Silk
Road. He gained popularity due to his active involvement
in forums, where he promoted his business model under a

I-TREND was a European project co-financed by the Drug


Prevention and Information Programme of the European
Union, involving researchers from five European countries
(the Czech Republic, France, the Netherlands, Poland and
the United Kingdom). The project activities included
monitoring online user forums and shops, conducting an
online survey targeting users of new psychoactive
substances, and analysis of samples and exchange of
reference standards.

135

The internet and drug markets

New psychoactive substances (NPS, also known as legal


highs) are new narcotic or psychotropic drugs, in pure
form or in preparation, that are not controlled by the
United Nations drug conventions, but which may pose a
public health threat comparable to that posed by
substances listed in these conventions.
Off-the-record (OTR) is a method for encrypting instant
messaging services, such as Google Talk, Facebook or
Jabber. The software typically comes as a plug-in that is
installed alongside another chat programme. This method
of communication doesnt use the messaging system of a
cryptomarket, but vendors may advertise their OTR
contact details on a site.
Onion routing is a technique for anonymous
communication over a computer network. In an onion
network, messages are encapsulated in layers of
encryption. The encrypted data are transmitted through a
series of network nodes called onion routers, each of
which peels away a single layer, uncovering the datas
next destination. When the final layer is decrypted, the
message arrives at its destination. The sender remains
anonymous because each intermediary knows only the
location of the immediately preceding and following
nodes.
OpenBazaar is an open source project to create a
decentralised network for peer-to-peer commerce online.
Each computer handles only a part of the marketplace,
rather than everything being handled by one single
computer or server. Use of Tor hidden services or I2P
eepsites could be possible with this model, to further
protect the identity and privacy of users involved in the
marketplace.
Operation Onymous was a joint operation by US and
European law enforcement agencies targeting the dark
net that resulted in the shutting down of Silk Road2.0
(and the arrest of its alleged administrator) and another
26 dark net websites in November 2014. The operation
involved the police forces of 17 countries. In total, there
were 17 arrests.
Operation Pangea is an operation that tackles the online
sale of counterfeit and illicit medicines and highlights the
dangers of buying medicines online. It brings together
several law enforcement bodies from countries around
the world including customs, health regulators and
national police and includes the private sector. It started
in 2008 and runs for a week on an annual basis. The last
operation took place in June 2015 (Interpol, 2015) and
resulted in 9.6million fake and illicit medicines (worth
more than USD32million) seized, 434 arrests and more
than 11800 websites shut down.

136

Glossary

Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) is a data encryption and


decryption computer programme that provides
cryptographic privacy and authentication for data
communication. PGP is often used for signing, encrypting
and decrypting texts, emails, files, directories and whole
disk partitions and to increase the security of email
communications.
Relays are computers that switch internet traffic from one
computer to another before it reaches its destination. The
Tor Network comprises around 7000 of these relays.
Silk Road was a cryptomarket that operated as a Tor
hidden service and used bitcoin as its exchange currency.
Silk Road was the archetypical cryptomarket, being the
most well-known and remaining the largest for a long
period.
Spamdexing is the deliberate manipulation of search
engine indexes. It involves a number of methods, such as
repeating unrelated phrases, to manipulate the relevance
or prominence of resources indexed in a manner
inconsistent with the purpose of the indexing system.
The surface web or clear web or clear net is the internet
that can be found by the link-crawling techniques used by
a typical search engine such as Google, Bing or Yahoo. It
refers to the unencrypted non-dark, non-Tor internet.
Tor (The Onion Router) is a free software that enables
online anonymity by hiding a computers IP address. The
Tor Network is a group of volunteer-operated servers that
allows people to improve their privacy and security on the
internet. Tors users employ this network by connecting
through a series of virtual tunnels rather than making a
direct connection, thus allowing both organisations and
individuals to share information over public networks
without compromising their privacy. It has many societal
benefits, such as enabling users to avoid censorship and
allowing anonymous communication with victims of
abuse, but it is also used for illegal matters, such as drug
dealing.
A virtual circuit is a means of transporting data over a
computer network in such a way that it appears as though
there is a dedicated physical layer link between the
source and destination end systems of these data.
Web2.0 describes world wide web sites that emphasise
user-generated content, usability and interoperability.
Examples of Web2.0 sites include social networking
sites, blogs, wikis, folksonomies, video-sharing sites,
hosted services, web applications and mashups.

HOW TO OBTAIN EU PUBLICATIONS


Free publications
one copy:
via EU Bookshop (http://bookshop.europa.eu)
more than one copy or posters/maps:
from the European Unions representations
(http://ec.europa.eu/represent_en.htm);
from the delegations in non-EU countries
(http://eeas.europa.eu/delegations/index_en.htm);
by contacting the Europe Direct service
(http://europa.eu/europedirect/index_en.htm) or
calling 00 800 6 7 8 9 10 11
(freephone number from anywhere in the EU) (*).
(*) The information given is free, as are most calls (though
some operators, phone boxes or hotels may charge you).

Priced publications
via EU Bookshop (http://bookshop.europa.eu)

TD-XD-16-001-EN-N

About the EMCDDA


The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and
Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) is the central source and
confirmed authority on drug-related issues in Europe.
For over 20 years, it has been collecting, analysing and
disseminating scientifically sound information on drugs
and drug addiction and their consequences, providing
its audiences with an evidence-based picture of the
drug phenomenon at European level.
The EMCDDAs publications are a prime source of
information for a wide range of audiences including:
policymakers and their advisors; professionals and
researchers working in the drugs field; and, more
broadly, the media and general public. Based in Lisbon,
the EMCDDA is one of the decentralised agencies of
the European Union.

About this series


EMCDDA Insights are topic-based reports that bring
together current research and study findings on a
particular issue in the drugs field. This publication
describes how the proliferation of social media and
development of web technologies have brought greater
user interaction and have the potential to influence
customer and user involvement in drug markets.

doi:10.2810/324608

You might also like