Dark Web Risks — Scams, Fraud and Awareness
The risks on the dark web are real and documented. This cluster covers scam patterns, identity theft terminology, OPSEC failures, and the law enforcement operations that have dismantled major markets.
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Dark Web Risks: A Research Overview
Dark web risks span five categories: financial fraud, identity theft, malware, law enforcement exposure, and fake listings. A documented research overview.
Five articles in this section
Carding Terminology: What the Terms Mean
A research glossary of carding terminology used in cybercrime investigations and financial fraud reporting. Definitions only — no operational detail.
Darknet Scam Patterns: How the Fraud Works
Six patterns account for most darknet fraud. This page documents exit scams, vendor scams, phishing replicas, FE pressure, drop recruitment, and fake services.
Fake IDs and Counterfeit Goods: Dark Web Risk
Fake IDs and counterfeit goods sold on dark web markets: documented scale, detection methods, and federal legal consequences including 18 U.S.C. § 1028.
Law Enforcement Dark Web Operations
U.S. and European agencies have dismantled over 15 darknet platforms since 2013: Silk Road, Operation Bayonet, Hydra, and the investigative techniques used.
OPSEC and Threat Modeling on the Dark Web
Most documented dark web arrests stem from OPSEC failures. This guide covers threat modeling, the Cazes and Ulbricht cases, and practices for researchers.