What's new
  • Happy Birthday ICMag! Been 20 years since Gypsy Nirvana created the forum! We are celebrating with a 4/20 Giveaway and by launching a new Patreon tier called "420club". You can read more here.
  • Important notice: ICMag's T.O.U. has been updated. Please review it here. For your convenience, it is also available in the main forum menu, under 'Quick Links"!

tried to warn ye all bout g00g1e merged with Feds arrest the alleged founder of Bitco

al70

Active member
Veteran
Silk Road: How FBI closed in on suspect Ross Ulbricht

By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News
_70244972_75960133.jpg
A lengthy investigation into internet communications led the FBI to their suspect
Continue reading the main story Related Stories

US authorities believe that 29-year-old Ross William Ulbricht, arrested on Wednesday, is Dread Pirate Roberts (DPR) - the administrator of the notorious Silk Road online marketplace.
It was an underground website where people from all over the world were able to buy drugs.
In the months leading up to Mr Ulbricht's arrest, investigators undertook a painstaking process of piecing together the suspect's digital footprint, going back years into his history of communicating with others online.
The detail of how the FBI has built its case was outlined in a court complaint document published on Wednesday.
The search started with work from Agent-1, the codename given to the expert cited in the court documents, who undertook an "extensive search of the internet" that sifted through pages dating back to January 2011.
The trail began with a post made on a web forum where users discussed the use of magic mushrooms.
In a post titled "Anonymous market online?", a user nicknamed Altoid started publicising the site.
Continue reading the main story What was the Silk Road?

Silk Road took its name from the historic trade routes spanning Europe, Asia and parts of Africa.
News reports and other internet chatter helped it become notorious. However, most users would not have been able to stumble upon the site as the service could only be accessed through a service called Tor - a facility that routes traffic through many separate encrypted layers of the net to hide data identifiers.
Tor was invented by the US Naval Research Laboratory and has subsequently been used by journalists and free speech campaigners, among others, to safeguard people's anonymity.
But it has also been used as a means to hide illegal activities, leading it to be dubbed "the dark web".
Payments for goods on Silk Road were made with the virtual currency Bitcoin, which can be hard to monitor.
Court documents from the FBI said the site had just under a million registered users, but investigators said they did not know how many were active.
Earlier this year Carnegie Mellon University estimated that over $1.22m (£786,000) worth of trading took place on the Silk Road every month.

"I came across this website called Silk Road," Altoid wrote. "Let me know what you think."
The post contained a link to a site hosted by the popular blogging platform Wordpress. This provided another link to the Silk Road's location on the so-called "dark web".
Records obtained by Agent-1 from Wordpress discovered, unsurprisingly, that the blog had been set up by an anonymous user who had hidden their location.
But then Altoid appeared in another place: a discussion site about virtual currency, bitcointalk.org.
Altoid - who the FBI claimed is Mr Ulbricht - was using "common online marketing" tactics. In other words, he was trying to make Silk Road go viral.
Months later, in October, Altoid appeared again - but made a slip-up, granting investigators a major lead.
In a post asking seeking to find an IT expert with knowledge of Bitcoin, he asked people to contact him via rossulbricht@gmail.com.
With a Gmail address to hand, Agent-1 linked this address to accounts on the Google+ social network and YouTube video site. There he discovered some of Mr Ulbricht's interests.
Among them, according to the viewing history, was economics. In particular, Mr Ulbricht's account had "favourited" several clips from the Ludwig von Mises Institute, a renowned Austrian school of economics.
Years later, on the Silk Road discussion forums, Dread Pirate Roberts would make several references to the Mises Institute and its work.
Covering tracks
According to the court complaint document, it was the discovery of the rossulbricht@gmail.com email address that gave investigators a major boost in their search.
Through records "obtained from Google", details of IP addresses - and therefore locations - used to log into Mr Ulbricht's account focused the search on San Francisco, specifically an internet cafe on Laguna Street.
Furthermore, detailed analysis of Silk Road's source code highlighted a function that restricted who was able to log in to control the site, locking it down to just one IP address.
As would be expected, Dread Pirate Roberts was using a VPN - virtual private network - to generate a "false" IP address, designed to cover his tracks.
_70245026_70245025.jpg
Mr Ulbricht said to have been running Silk Road from Hickory Street in San Francisco
However, the provider of the VPN was subpoenaed by the FBI.
While efforts had been made by DPR to delete data, the VPN server's records showed a user logged in from an internet cafe just 500 yards from an address on Hickory Street, known to be the home of a close friend of Mr Ulbricht's, and a location that had also been used to log in to the Gmail account.
At this point in the investigation, these clues, investigators concluded, were enough to suggest that Mr Ulbricht and DPR - if not the same person - were at the very least in the same location at the same time.
Fake IDs
The court complaint went into detail about further leads that followed.
In July of this year, by coincidence, a routine border check of a package from Canada discovered forged documents for several fake identities all containing photographs of the same person.
Continue reading the main story How bitcoins work

Bitcoin is often referred to as a new kind of currency.
But it may be better to think of its units as being virtual tokens that have value because enough people believe they do and there is a finite number of them.
Each of the 11 million Bitcoins currently in existence is represented by a unique online registration number.
These numbers are created through a process called "mining", which involves a computer solving a difficult mathematical problem.
Each time a problem is solved the computer's owner is rewarded with 25 Bitcoins.
To receive a Bitcoin, a user must also have a Bitcoin address - a randomly generated string of 27 to 34 letters and numbers - which acts as a kind of virtual postbox to and from which the Bitcoins are sent.
Since there is no registry of these addresses, people can use them to protect their anonymity when making a transaction.
These addresses are in turn stored in Bitcoin wallets, which are used to manage savings. They operate like privately run bank accounts - with the proviso that if the data is lost, so are the Bitcoins contained.

It was headed to San Francisco's 15th Street. Homeland security visited the address, and found the man in the photographs - Mr Ulbricht.
He told officers that the people he lived with knew him simply as Josh - one housemate described him as being "always home in his room on the computer".
Around the same time, investigators working on the Silk Road case later discovered, DPR had been communicating with users privately to ask for advice on obtaining fake IDs - needed in order to purchase more servers.
Further activity attributed to Mr Ulbricht took place on Stack Overflow - a question-and-answer website for programmers - where a user named Frosty asked questions about intricate coding that later became part of the source code of Silk Road.
In another apparent slip-up, one of Frosty's messages initially identified itself as being written by Ross Ulbricht - before being quickly corrected.
"I believe that Ulbricht changed his username to 'frosty' in order to conceal his association with the message he had posted one minute before," lead prosecutor Christopher Tarbell wrote in court documents.
"The posting was accessible to anyone on the internet and implicated him in operating a Tor hidden service."
 

igrowone

Well-known member
Veteran
interesting stuff, still, if it wasn't google they would have have found the next weakest link
if you setup something like the SR, you're going to leave some virtual fingerprints somewhere
but it wasn't the savviest move
 

pappy masonjar

Well-known member
Veteran
Its a "what-not-to-do" if your running a multi-billion dollar drug trafficking website. thats for sure. But i would be willing to bet, this idiot is not the original DPR. Not the one that started the site. "Dread Pirates Roberts" was a character from the movie, "The Princess Bride". And it turned out to be a group of people, not one man. So if one Dread Pirate Roberts was captured, another can take his place. The original DPR is prolly counting his money somewhere, just smiling. And the feds may have cut off the silk roads head, but believe itll pop up somewhere else with a new name. Those guys whole philosophy is about "f*#@ the government". They think drug laws are wrong and unjustified, so they choose to ignore them. And the best part, they figured out how to use the government, to do their dirty work. express mail, courtesy of the usps.


and does anybody think its weird, that someone with that much education and buisness savvy, would ask for IT help on a drug forum and give their real email with their exact real name in it? O yeah, and then "accidently" posted his real name again, on an internet site for computer genuises. Im mean, i know everyone makes mistakes, but really? reeeallly?
 
the provider of the VPN was subpoenaed by the FBI.
While efforts had been made by DPR to delete data, the VPN server's records showed a user logged in from an internet cafe just 500 yards from an address on Hickory Street, known to be the home of a close friend of Mr Ulbricht's, and a location that had also been used to log in to the Gmail account.

So what we really need to know is what VPN service Mr. Ulbrich was using that sold him out to the FBI.
 

pappy masonjar

Well-known member
Veteran
If your not running a major illegal international drug dealing site, i really dont think you have to worry. The nsa/dea or whoever, doesnt have time to worry about you. There are thousands of people trying to smuggle drugs across the borders everyday. Hard drugs. Not to mention all the drug dealers inside the US they have to worry about. Not to mention terroists being funded by drug profits, and gun violence from drug activity, and everything else that is much more serious than whatever you are doing. So chillax, smoke a doobie:smoke:

and remember, you dont have to outrun the bear, you just gotta not be big enough for him to wanna eat you;).

bad anology, but u get my point.
 

Crusader Rabbit

Active member
Veteran
and remember, you dont have to outrun the bear, you just gotta not be big enough for him to wanna eat you;).

bad anology, but u get my point.

I read of a wildlife photographer who when going out to film grizzlies, always made it a point to hire an assistant with shorter legs than his.
 

Hydrosun

I love my life
Veteran
By Timothy B. Lee, Published: October 2 at 12:13 pmE-mail the writer

Federal prosecutors have indicted a man named Ross William Ulbricht in San Francisco. They say he is the founder of Silk Road, a controversial website that allows users to buy and sell narcotics and other illicit goods. Founded in 2011, Silk Road website used Bitcoin, a digital currency that helped mask the identity of Silk Road's merchants and customers.

The government shuttered the site and seized approximately 26,000 Bitcoins worth approximately $3.6 million. The government says it was the largest ever Bitcoin seizure in history.

"During its two and a half years in operation, Silk Road has been used by several thousand drug dealers and other unlawful vendors to distribute hundreds of kilograms of illegal drugs and other illicit goods and services to well over a hundred thousand buyers," the government alleges in its indictment. The government says that 600,000 Bitcoins changed hands on the site, which at current exchange rates translates to $1.2 billion.

In addition to narcotics, Silk Road also had listings for fake drivers' licenses, counterfeit currency, hacking services and much more, the government alleges.

According to the government's complaint, the defendant is 29 years old. He earned a bachelor's degree in physics from the University of Texas in 2006, and later attended the Pennsylvania School of Materials Science and Engineering.

The government says it identified Ulbricht after a routine border search of a package that contained nine counterfeit IDs. The package was shipped from Canada to an address in San Francisco. When the government visited the San Francisco address, they found Ulbricht there.

The government then identified the primary Silk Road server and obtained an image of its hard drive in July, providing the federal government with a wealth of information about the Silk Road's operations.

We'll have much more on the Silk Road shutdown in the coming hours.
 

Latest posts

Latest posts

Top