
A hacker with three decades of experience once spoke about the scariest things he saw while exploring the dark web.
If you go onto the internet you're most likely going to be using things you find on the 'surface web', which is the bits of the online world which are accessible to the public and can be reached via a search engine.
Basically, if you can Google it and find it from there, you're on the surface web.
A layer down is the 'deep web', any part of the internet that isn't indexed by search engines which typically includes the sort of thing you need paywalls and passwords to access.
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More specific yet than that is the dark web, unindexed webpages which require specific browsers to access for encryption and anonymity.

Speaking to Vice in 2021, an anonymous hacker said he'd become a 'white hat' over the years who used his hacking skills for good and found weak spots in security software which he could warn people about so they could be safer.
One of the main things he looks out for are ransomware attacks, where criminals get malware onto somebody's computer system, encrypt their own data and then charge them money so they can access their information again.
The hacker explained that some of the scariest things he'd seen were 'black hat' hackers who weren't bound by any code of ethics, admitting that he used to be one himself.
He said some of these people were 'destructive attackers' who 'want to see the world burn', as he explained that among the things he'd encountered were ransomware attacks on hospitals which targeted patient data.
He said: "I've watched hospitals get encrypted and people are left with a choice: do I pay to decrypt the data or do I risk lives?

"Back when it started ransomware was charging hundreds of dollars, maybe thousands of dollars for individual targets.
"The bigger payouts that we're talking about now are easily into the tens of millions.
"This last, most recent attack, they offered $70 million dollars for the campaign key, which is the key that would have unlocked every single computer encrypted during that attack. So we're talking high-stakes games here."
Another top ethical hacker, Ryan Montgomery, explained that his experience of the dark web was 'horrible' sites that 'do horrible things'.
“There’s counterfeit money, there’s fake IDs, there all kinds of different websites that do horrible things," he explained, saying that sometimes he'd had to go onto the dark web to track down 'predators and paedophiles'.
Some of the websites on there also concern the 'murder for hire' business where people offered Bitcoin rewards to mark somebody for death, though in many cases the 'hitmen' are trying to scam people into paying them the cryptocurrency.
Topics: Technology, Community, Crime