What Is the Dark Web — Research Guides
The dark web is accessible only via anonymizing networks like Tor. This cluster covers what it is, who uses it, and why the common narratives about it are often wrong.
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What Is the Dark Web? A Research Overview
The dark web is a layer of the internet reachable only via anonymizing networks like Tor. This guide explains what it is, who uses it, and what the risks are.
Six articles in this section
Dark Web vs Darknet: Is There a Difference?
Darknet and dark web are used interchangeably in news coverage, but they describe different things. This guide explains the technical distinction clearly.
Dark Web vs Deep Web: What's the Difference?
Dark web and deep web are not the same thing. This guide explains the three-layer internet model, what each layer contains, and why the distinction matters.
History of the Dark Web: From Naval Lab to Now
The dark web's origins trace to a 1990s U.S. Navy research project. This guide covers the full history from onion routing to Silk Road and modern enforcement.
Is the Dark Web Illegal? What the Law Says
Downloading Tor and accessing the dark web is legal in most democracies. This guide explains what is and isn't illegal across U.S., U.K., and EU jurisdictions.
7 Dark Web Myths That Won't Die
From 'it's enormous' to 'only criminals use it,' dark web myths are persistent and wrong. Here are seven of the most common, corrected with sources.
Who Uses the Dark Web — and Why
Research shows most dark web users are privacy-seekers, journalists, and dissidents — not criminals. This guide breaks down who actually uses Tor and why.