- Source: Dark0de
dark0de, also known as Darkode, is a cybercrime forum and black marketplace described by Europol as "the most prolific English-speaking cybercriminal forum to date". The site, which was launched in 2007, serves as a venue for the sale and trade of hacking services, botnets, malware, stolen personally identifiable information, credit card information, hacked server credentials, and other illicit goods and services.
History
In early 2013, it came under a large DDoS attack moving from bulletproof hosting provider Santrex to off-shore, the latter being a participant of the Stophaus campaign against Spamhaus. The site has had an ongoing feud with security researcher Brian Krebs.
In April 2014, various site users were attacked via the Heartbleed exploit, gaining access to private areas of the site.
Takedown
The forum was the target of Operation Shrouded Horizon, an international law enforcement effort led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation which culminated in the site's seizure and arrests of several of its members in July 2015. According to the FBI, the case is "believed to be the largest-ever coordinated law enforcement effort directed at an online cyber criminal forum". Upon announcing the 12 charges issued by the United States, Attorney David Hickton called the site "a cyber hornet's nest of criminal hackers", "the most sophisticated English-speaking forum for criminal computer hackers in the world" which "represented one of the gravest threats to the integrity of data on computers in the United States".
On Monday, September 21, 2015, Daniel Placek appeared on the podcast Radiolab discussing his role in starting Darkode and his eventual cooperation with the United States government in its efforts to take down the site.
Revivals
Only two weeks after the announcement of the raid, the site reappeared with increased security, employing blockchain-based authentication and operating on the Tor anonymity network. Researchers from MalwareTech suggested the relaunch was not genuine, and almost immediately after, it was hacked and its database leaked.
On December 13, a version of the site returned on the original domain name.
See also
Lizard Squad, a hacking group, said to have used dark0de
RaidForums, another highly prolific hacking forum
References
External links
Darkode archive project
News about Dark0de
The User’s Guide to Darkode: A Complete History and How to Use It Archived 2019-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Dark0de
- Archive.today
- List of Internet forums
- RaidForums
- BreachForums
- Kiwi Farms
- Dark web
- List of Tor onion services
- Proton Mail
- Hack Forums