06-19-2015, 11:39 PM
So I just watched this documentary called Deep Web, which studied the case and trial of Ross Ulbricht, the architect of a dark web vendor site called Silk Road which was highly used for illegal drugs. He used TOR and bitcoin to anonymously and untraceably set up the Ebay of Heroin, LSD, and so on. You can get the gist of the trial here.
There's a myriad of issues with this case. There's existential/philosophical morality questions about, if drug users and vendors have a safer, nonviolent marketplace, why is the government regulating free trade even of illicit substances, etc etc. There's a deeper, less relevant argument about the War on Drugs, and who benefits from the FBI and CIA having multi-million dollar budgets to combat "threats," which could actually be accelerating and escalating violence in the drug world. There's cyber-legality issues, akin to the Napster lawsuit in the late 90s/early 2000 about what responsibility the admin of a network holds for peer to peer user transactions. There's particularly debate surrounding privacy and online anonymity that this trial brings into focus.
The documentary I watched had a very biased viewpoint, which makes it hard to call a documentary, but they brought up some really damning points. First, the kid was initially charged with attempting contracts for murder, which painted him as a violent criminal in the media, and his bail was denied on account of danger to society due to his murder charges. Then months later, when he's indicted, the charges for contract murder were never levied. Then during his trial, the judge wouldn't force the prosecution to disclose witness names during discovery to his lawyers because Ulbricht might have them killed... a crime he again wasn't charged with. When his defense wanted to cross examine the LE officers that were involved in the undercover online operation to show a case that there might have been more than one user using the Dread Pirate Roberts moniker, which the one main agent did even believe, the judge threw it out. When the defense wanted to have technical experts testify that the anonymity of the web forced agencies to basically hack the kid's site in order to gather the evidence to bring him down, the judge said there was no technical evidence required for the case and denied their testimony.
All that could be really circumstantial, but it does show the prosecution and judge using pretty leveraged tactics with the case. But now, one of the officers will plead guilty to stealing over $800,000 worth of bitcoin. So if the officers involved were technically proficient and morally corrupt enough to steal 800k during the arrest, it really tells me that someone would be willing to acquire evidence illegally to drown this kid. They set him up in the media as a violent drug kingpin, and he didn't even sell an ounce of drugs from what I can tell. He did profit personally off commissions for the site, but the judge really made sure the prosecution's charges stuck. Now the dude's sentences to life in prison.
The judge even made a comment pertaining to the fact the he's not only a college graduate, but has a masters in science. “There must be no doubt that no one is above the law, no matter the education or the privileges. All stand equal before the law." And yet, the government agencies that hacked his website to copy and seize his servers in Icleland were swept under the rug. I'm not saying the kid is innocent, even if he does seem to be a rather morally upright individual. He profited from enabling illegal activity, and even he understood that he should be punished. My problem with it is that the government really bullied the shit out of this guy. I believe they broke their own laws with hacking and ignored the chain of evidence to convict their man, and I believe the judge was complicit in their wrongdoing. What's more, I think it's corruption like this that are going to give hackers incentive to bring it all crashing down.
There's a myriad of issues with this case. There's existential/philosophical morality questions about, if drug users and vendors have a safer, nonviolent marketplace, why is the government regulating free trade even of illicit substances, etc etc. There's a deeper, less relevant argument about the War on Drugs, and who benefits from the FBI and CIA having multi-million dollar budgets to combat "threats," which could actually be accelerating and escalating violence in the drug world. There's cyber-legality issues, akin to the Napster lawsuit in the late 90s/early 2000 about what responsibility the admin of a network holds for peer to peer user transactions. There's particularly debate surrounding privacy and online anonymity that this trial brings into focus.
The documentary I watched had a very biased viewpoint, which makes it hard to call a documentary, but they brought up some really damning points. First, the kid was initially charged with attempting contracts for murder, which painted him as a violent criminal in the media, and his bail was denied on account of danger to society due to his murder charges. Then months later, when he's indicted, the charges for contract murder were never levied. Then during his trial, the judge wouldn't force the prosecution to disclose witness names during discovery to his lawyers because Ulbricht might have them killed... a crime he again wasn't charged with. When his defense wanted to cross examine the LE officers that were involved in the undercover online operation to show a case that there might have been more than one user using the Dread Pirate Roberts moniker, which the one main agent did even believe, the judge threw it out. When the defense wanted to have technical experts testify that the anonymity of the web forced agencies to basically hack the kid's site in order to gather the evidence to bring him down, the judge said there was no technical evidence required for the case and denied their testimony.
All that could be really circumstantial, but it does show the prosecution and judge using pretty leveraged tactics with the case. But now, one of the officers will plead guilty to stealing over $800,000 worth of bitcoin. So if the officers involved were technically proficient and morally corrupt enough to steal 800k during the arrest, it really tells me that someone would be willing to acquire evidence illegally to drown this kid. They set him up in the media as a violent drug kingpin, and he didn't even sell an ounce of drugs from what I can tell. He did profit personally off commissions for the site, but the judge really made sure the prosecution's charges stuck. Now the dude's sentences to life in prison.
The judge even made a comment pertaining to the fact the he's not only a college graduate, but has a masters in science. “There must be no doubt that no one is above the law, no matter the education or the privileges. All stand equal before the law." And yet, the government agencies that hacked his website to copy and seize his servers in Icleland were swept under the rug. I'm not saying the kid is innocent, even if he does seem to be a rather morally upright individual. He profited from enabling illegal activity, and even he understood that he should be punished. My problem with it is that the government really bullied the shit out of this guy. I believe they broke their own laws with hacking and ignored the chain of evidence to convict their man, and I believe the judge was complicit in their wrongdoing. What's more, I think it's corruption like this that are going to give hackers incentive to bring it all crashing down.