Live Stoner Chat Silkroad 2.0 taken down. Again!

WEEDOSHI

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Silkroad 1, was taken down a few months ago. Silkroad was a open marketplace where one could purchase any drugs they desire. The drug represented free liberalism, a marketplace where anyone could purchase anything they wanted without any government intervention. Popular to contrary belief, Silkroad disallowed anything that could harm anybody else (hit-men, guns & anything of the nature that could harm others.)

Silkroad 2.0 - The second version to Silkroad 1.0 was resurrected about 3 months ago and promised better security. The 2nd version only rose less than 30 days from the first marketplace falling.

12-24 hours ago, Silkroad 2.0's moderators & an administrator according to intelligence were arrested in a worldwide synchronized operation. Intelligence suggests that 1 person in Brisbane Australia, 1 person from America, 1 Person from Ireland (Called Ingeo/Ingio) were arrested.

Silkroad 2.0's administrator was not arrested. And the site is fully functional and running. Silkroad 2.0's administrator has assured its users that SR2.0 has not been affected by this take-down attempt. Intelligence tells us that there are indeed law enforcement agents already inside the "round table" of administrators & moderators. Vendor/Client conversations were leaked, but the server itself was not compromised.

Information sources also suggest that law enforcement has directed resources to finding vendors (sellers) and a number of vendors were arrested in this take-down attempt.

This is a warning guys, Silkroad 2.0 is not safe as of yet. Don't visit the site, don't visit the clearnet pages, don't visit their forum. The administrator (DPR/owner) himself could be law enforcement.
 
If I know one thing, I know DPR isn't law enforcement..
 
If I know one thing, I know DPR isn't law enforcement..

Unless you're DPR himself there's no way to confirm this. Regardless, the site isn't safe to use as of yet. Vendors are pulling out and buyers are panicking. DPR has assured users that SR is not affected by this attack, but I highly doubt it hasn't affected SR's operations.
 
Always prefer good old fashion face to face if I'm buying anything. I like to see what I'm buying and see what the seller is like and know 100% I'm gonna get my product. Like the idea of sr don't get me wrong but just not for me, nothing on the Internet is safe IMO. Not all dealers sell shit or wanna rob you believe it or not its a business for them and they want you to come back.
 
Thus the reason a private internet is needed. But one must first know what a Internet is. The internet is a system of networks sharing information. When logging into the silk road, you use a program that spoofs your outside IP address to the rest of the world. There in lays the problem. The rest of the world. McAfee is hard pressing himself and his money to do just that. A private internet outside of the world. Give it time mate. The governments of the world hate anything they can't monitor or more over control.
 
Thus the reason a private internet is needed. But one must first know what a Internet is. The internet is a system of networks sharing information. When logging into the silk road, you use a program that spoofs your outside IP address to the rest of the world. There in lays the problem. The rest of the world. McAfee is hard pressing himself and his money to do just that. A private internet outside of the world. Give it time mate. The governments of the world hate anything they can't monitor or more over control.

Tor is not the issue with Silkroad or other black markets online. Tor is extremely secure. It doesn't only spoof your IP address. It encrypts all of your data through a layer of 3 servers before reaching your primary destination server (say Silkroad). Each "server" is changed periodically every 10 minutes making it near impossible to track data because your location is constantly changing through 3 sets of servers, which are also constantly changing. The data is also not transferred in plain-text but via an encrypted algorithm used by Tor. With proper security modifications to the tor bundle, tor is pretty much flawless in terms of security.

The real issue is people leaking information on markets. Law enforcement can deploy people who are trained to psychologically manipulate their targets to obtain the needed information. People themselves are the greatest vulnerability.
 
Here

The 7 layer OSI model.

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i personally would have had a hard time placing trust in using a service like Silkroad in the first place but after the government takedown i wouldnt even visit that site with someone else's computer! :no:
 
It's not spoofing, its proxying. The ability to spoof TCP traffic was killed in the 90's, UDP traffic nope. TOR has been compromised, if you really believe its 100% secure, keep at it.

Exclusive: Secret contract tied NSA and security industry pioneer | Reuters

Sorry to disagree with ya bud. TCP/IP is a protocol. You don't spoof it, you encrypt it. Almost all TCP/IP traffic gets encrypted in one form or another. TCP/IP is the main protocol used. Although there are many others. Spoofing an IP address is in a sense hiding your identity. This is an absolute must on the TOR network. Once in it, go to What Is My IP | Shows Your IP Address. and check your IP address and cross reference with a CMD prompt ipconfig.. They will not match.

I didn't spend $65,000. on a education in Cisco Networking and Cyber Security for nothing. Here is a 7 second shot of packets going in and out. Notice the main protocol used. I blocked out the IP information to protect my identity.
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