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Dark Web

Encrypted, anonymized parts of the internet accessible only via specialized tools like Tor, used by both privacy advocates and cybercriminals.

Full Definition

The dark web refers to the encrypted, overlay portion of the internet that is not indexed by standard search engines and requires specialized software — most commonly the Tor (The Onion Router) browser — to access. It is a subset of the "deep web," which simply refers to any content not indexed by search engines.\n\nWhile the dark web has legitimate uses including anonymous communication, journalism under authoritarian regimes, and privacy protection, it is also home to a thriving criminal ecosystem. Cybercrime forums, data breach marketplaces, ransomware leak sites, drug markets, and counterfeit goods operations all operate within the dark web's anonymizing infrastructure.\n\nFor threat intelligence teams, the dark web is a critical monitoring environment. Stolen corporate data, employee credentials, insider access offers, and breach disclosures often appear on dark web forums before any public disclosure, giving intelligence-aware organizations a critical head start.

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