Guy Accused Of Operating Silk Road 2.0 Arrested In SF... Just Like The Last One
from the yes,-the-FBI-can-track-you-down dept
This morning, the FBI excitedly announced that they had arrested Blake Benthall as the alleged operator of Silk Road 2.0, the replacement to the original Silk Road, which went down when the feds arrested Ross Ulbricht 13 months ago. As with Ulbricht, Benthall is a young tech-savvy guy living in San Francisco. Assuming he was actually running Silk Road 2.0, you'd think he'd have figured out that staying in the US while doing so is a serious occupational hazard. You can read the full complaint, but it again looks like (just like Ulbricht) he was somewhat sloppy in covering his own tracks. It didn't help that he apparently allowed an undercover FBI agent to become pretty high up as a "support" staffer, giving him access to insider forums.The complaint (as with Ulbricht's) is an interesting read, though it will be interesting to see what other information comes out of the next few months. It's not clear how the FBI found the server (in a foreign country) and had it imaged. That raised some questions in Ulbricht's case, and will likely do the same here. Benthall bounced around a variety of jobs, including for RPX (a patent aggregator that has tried to position itself as the "not evil" version of Intellectual Ventures) and SpaceX. In fact, it appears that when Benthall took over Silk Road 2.0 from its original creator, he was employed by SpaceX at that time. The criminal complaint also notes that at some point he bought a Tesla with bitcoins, though he appears to have done so about a month after someone else made news for doing the same.
As for the actual charges, the specifics here matter. It still seems like a bit of a reach that merely running a marketplace online should make you liable for people doing illegal stuff in that marketplace, but things like Section 230 don't protect criminal activity. The complaint also has money laundering and CFAA hacking charges in there as well, though the details are still all a bit murky.
It appears that this takedown is part of a larger global effort to take down a bunch of "darknet" drug operators and websites, with Silk Road 2.0 just being the shiny one that many in the public had already heard about.
While it's reasonable to argue that this is criminal activity and should be taken down, others have suggested that by merely taking down online darkmarkets like Silk Road and Silk Road 2.0, the government is actually making the world more dangerous. Indeed, a study released a few months ago argued that Silk Road greatly reduced violence in the drug trade market. One could argue that keeping the drug market violent reduces incentives for people to get involved in it, but there is also the collateral damage that a violent drug market creates on third parties and innocent bystanders.
Either way, I doubt that this will stop Silk Road 3.0 (or something similar) from springing up before too long. And whether or not the FBI gets whoever runs that, this will be a continuous cat and mouse game, and I imagine that future darkmarkets will get more and more secure.
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Filed Under: blake benthall, dark market, doj, fbi, ross ulbricht, silk road, silk road 2.0
Companies: rpx, silk road, silk road 2.0, spacex
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Elon Musk and tesla connections
According to TESLA, the high voltage battery (lithium-ion battery) can release toxic vapors; including sulfuric acid, oxides of carbon, nickel, aluminum, lithium, copper, & cobalt.
Tesla fan boys are shills that spams slander, lies, FUD, hate, and ignorance. Tesla fan boys can't handle the truth. Tesla fan boys fear and hate truth.
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Re: Elon Musk and tesla connections
Only a Sith deals in absolutes.
I also like how you take the opportunity to use this as a soapbox for your own beliefs rather tan discussed the article and the points it makes, effectively making your entire point moot. Fail commenting 101.
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Cocaine
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Re: Cocaine
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Meh
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Findind Silk Road owners
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Re: Findind Silk Road owners
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Eventually people need to realize the best way to deal with these problems is to decriminalize or legalize. And regulate to the extent of MITIGATING (but not eliminating, remember diminishing returns) risk of harm.
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Two takeaways
2) While having open drug markets (like Silk Road 2) doubtless does reduce violence, it's still against the law.
So although the FBI's actions cause more harm than good here, they are indeed doing their job. The problem is the drug war, not the police who enforce the (idiotic) laws.
A policeman's job is to keep the peace and enforce the law, not to change the law.
Unfortunately, given stupid laws, there is often a conflict between "keeping the peace" and "enforcing the law".
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Re: Two takeaways
True. Staying anonymous while doing anything at all is harder than it looks. It has always been that way, even before the internet.
"The problem is the drug war, not the police who enforce the (idiotic) laws."
This is spot on. However, I must confess that I am highly suspicious of people who willing enter into jobs where they know they will have ot perpetuate injustice even when they aren't the root cause of it.
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Re: Re: Re: Two takeaways
However, I have know a fair number of cops who fall into a different category: they are not intentionally doing bad things with the justification that they're "just following order," but instead they mistakenly believe that they are doing something that is ultimately for the good. In other words, they believe (whether they know it or not) that the ends justify the means.
While I disagree with them and think that their stance is morally unsupportable, I find it hard to call these people "evil" or "bad". They are misguided.
Reality rarely cleaves cleanly into two camps of "good guys" and "bad guys". That's another reason that I say I am "suspicious" without automatically going to condemnation.
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The bulk of Silk Road drug sales were apparently for prescription drugs. Pharma has a powerful lobby. What's a little illegal surveillance between friends?
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The one flaw is that MySQL, itself, keeps no logs, so if you can break into the MySQL backend, you can bypass the normal user interface and the logs.
So the Feds could have gotten into his server, to get the evidence they needed, and the operators of Silk Road and Silk Road would never know they were there.
By breaking into the database backend, the Feds can avoid having to have a search warrant.
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We've seen this before
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And he'll be offered a deal he can't refuse: plead guilty and accept a few years in jail, or go to court and face the possibility of basically a life sentence. All for the "crime" of hosting a harmless website.
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1). He has been charged with conspiracy to aid and abet computer hacking. The charge is based on SR2 allowing vendors to sell password crackers, keyloggers, and remote access software. It is not illegal to possess any of those items, and they are sold on other websites. However, if a manufacturer or vendor advertises the illegal purposes these things can be used for, that vendor can be charged with a crime. Can Blake Benthall be held accountable for how the vendors at SR2 marketed their wares?
2). I am not sure that the HSI undercover agent was instrumental in bringing down SR2 and Benthall. If he was instrumental it would have been in locating the server. As a member of the support staff did he have access to the server location or IP address? If he did then it is likely he discovered the location early on such as in January. However, the server was imaged in late May which was probably the time the server location was discovered.
One possibility is that the de-anonymizing attack on Tor that started in late January and lasted till July 4th was a government operation intent on discovering the location of such Tor hidden services. The Tor group discovered this and removed some 115 relays that had been added as a group in late January. They also fixed an associated vulnerability. When that fix was announced at the end of July, Defcon moved the location of the servers. The new locations was also discovered but by then they already had Benthall's identity.
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Illegal Wack-a-mole
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Honeypot
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