Results from an EMCDDA study on Internet and drug markets
Transcription
Results from an EMCDDA study on Internet and drug markets
A game changer? Results from an EMCDDA study on Internet and drug markets Jane Mounteney PhD, Alberto Oteo, Danica Thanki, Alessandra Bo Rationale for the study - uncertainty • New virtual drug marketplaces emerging • Receiving increasing attention - academic and media • EMCDDA web monitoring NPS but… • Limited information on size, scale, shape, potential impact… uncertainty • Potentially major implications for the field emcdda.europa.eu 2 2 Study objectives To increase understanding of the online supply of drugs and undertake a mapping of the range of internet drug markets in existence. Surface web • The role of social media and apps • Online sale of NPS • Online sales of medicinal products for illicit use •Sale of drugs on the deep web. emcdda.europa.eu 3 Trendspotter (case study) methodology Draws on mixed methods approaches And rapid assessment methodologies Multi-source, multi-method, triangulation: •Literature review •Data collection •Electronic survey •Expert presentations •Focus groups •Social media emcdda.europa.eu 4 Trendspotter study process Preparation Data collection, literature review Post meeting Expert presentations x15 & team Focus/ discussion groups ANALYSIS Report Electronic survey Network survey Expert meeting Participating experts 4% 96% 7 8 Dark net markets, cryptomarkets Combination of technologies: Tor – communication anonymity between buyer and seller Bitcoin – payment anonymity Encryption 9 Rating systems • Cryptomarkets rely heavily on trust. • Rating systems provide buyers with a fairly reliable track record of a vendor’s previous transactions 10 2012 to 2013, rapidly increasing market Yearly sales estimates from $15 million in SR in 2012 (Christin, 2013) to $ 90 million in 2013 (Aldridge; Décary‐Hetu, 2014) Number of active retailers on the Black Market Reloaded, Sheep Market and Silk Road 2.0 (Van Buskirk et al, 2013) 11 2014 to 2015, threats and developments • Oct 2013, Silk Road closure, arrest of Ross Ulbricht (Dread Pirate Roberts) • Operation Onymous, November 2014 Interpol announced the closing down of 400 deep websites, including Silk Road 2.0. • Scams and closures, taking the bitcoin money stored in their accounts (e.g. Evolution March 2015) • Agora closes – for ‘security’ reasons August 2015 Drug listings 13 Sales volumes 14 Soska & Christin 2015 Sale of items/substances STIMULANTS MDMA CANNABIS 15 Soska & Christin 2015 Why buy online? Top reasons on Silk Road Access /availability Quality Better quality Poor quality in locality High rating sellers Vendor feedback ratings Member forum information Harm reduction Safety Wider range of drugs available Speedy delivery Convenient to order online Site’s anonymity Personal safety vs buying on the streets 16 17 Ease of access 18 Evolving markets • A new breed of entrepreneurial drug dealer • Overlaps between DWM and clear web M – Facebook, portals and grey market worm holes • Online markets are rooted/anchored in offline structures – esp production and postal delivery systems • Technological impact ‐ from open to closed to open (Aldridge) to closed markets, e.g. Agora invite only Site for community interventions: Doctor X Not room for so many more doctors in the DWM! Threats: infiltrate or self destruct • Increased uncertainty in the deep web community as a result of police interventions and vendor scams • Increased security • Decentralisation ‐ distributed architecture in response to threats Conclusions Extent of drug transactions on the deep web is currently limited; early growth exponential, but plateauing? ‘DNMs unlikely to alter the entire market. Perhaps further segment it. Certain drugs like MDMA may move mostly online. And the web may be the preferred source for affluent users and small‐time dealers.’ (Schrager 2015) Report available and new publication out soon Thank you! 23