The Dark Web and Its Impact on Your Business
Business owners today know the inte
et is not only a force for good. Some people exploit the Web for ill intent. They congregate on the Dark Web, and small businesses need to understand the risks.
What is the Dark Web?
You and your employees spend time daily on the Web. They’re researching clients, checking out competitors, and searching for information. They are not accessing the Dark Web. The Dark Web houses dangerous, often illegal activity. This includes black-market drug sales, illegal firearm sales, and illicit po
ography.
The Dark Web’s collection of websites is inaccessible using standard search engines or browsers. Users employ a Tor or I2P encryption tool to hide their identity and activity, and they spoof IP addresses.
To go into the Dark Web, you also need to be using the Tor or I2P service. Plus, you’d need to know where to find the site you are looking for. There are Dark Web directories, but they are unreliable. The people on the Dark Web don’t want their victims to find them. Ultimately, it’s not somewhere you or your employees need to be.
So, why do you need to know about it? Because Dark Web users can buy:
- use ames and passwords
- counterfeit money
- stolen credit card numbers or subscription credentials
- software to break into people’s computers
- operational, financial, or customer data
- intellectual property or trade secrets
- undermining brand reputation
- loss of competitive advantage
- denial-of-service attack or malware disruption
- IP theft
- fraudulent activity
- application control
- anti-malware scanning
- URL and content filtering
- data loss prevention
- email security
- wireless and remote access management