While the western world struggles with rising grocery bills and gas prices, the economy of the dark web – the digital black market – is chugging along as usual.
Inflation doesn’t seem to have hit the internet’s criminal underground – not yet, anyway. The war in Ukraine hasn’t registered much. Even the recent plummet in values of cryptocurrencies – the dark web’s currency of choice – hasn’t affected business.
We have not discovered a rise in any prices of underground commodities. Compromised credit cards, for example, are selling on dark web sites for less than they did a year ago, according to Cybersixgill’s research: $13 each in June of this year as opposed to $16 in 2021.
The price of a gram of cocaine has remained fairly stable since the start of the year, with a median price of around $80 per gram.
And even in the wake of some $700 billion in losses from the recent crypto market crash, criminals in the internet underground seem unfazed. They demand payment in cryptocurrency but generally list the prices of their goods and services in dollars – and so aren’t subject to the ups and downs of the volatile crypto market.
Who says crime doesn’t pay?
A dip – or even plummet – in crypto prices isn’t going to eliminate major cybercrime groups. Reserves in both crypto and fiat would most likely protect them from a single currency’s changing value. And their profit margins are so large that they can shrug off other, higher costs of doing business.
Even so, there are three trends that might affect the cybercriminal landscape:
- Crypto collapse: The crypto market crash wiped $700 billion from the economy, as we’ve already noted. Cryptocurrency has always been unpredictable and volatile. We don’t know whether it will rebound, hold steady around current values, or continue to decline.
If the crypto crash descends so deep that cryptocurrency becomes essentially worthless; if it affects trust in the system overall; or if the global infrastructure of wallets and exchanges collapses, the dark web could experience an existential change.
Being able to move money anonymously around the world is critical to the very existence of cybercrime and the dark web as we know them. The entire cybercriminal enterprise would slow down tremendously without this ability.
- Economic recession: Malicious actors often tie ransom to the revenue of the business they’re attacking. So if an economic downturn causes enterprises to earn less, ransom payments might go down. Earning less per victim might cause them to further step up the number of attempted attacks.
- Russian war on Ukraine: Russia generally allows cybercriminals to act freely as long as they do not attack Russian citizens. The government also has used cybercriminals to collect intelligence.
Have Russian cybercriminals been enlisted to use their hacking skills to back the Russian war efforts? How much has the war affected relationships between Russian and Ukrainian cybercrime collaborators? We wonder what will be the lingering effects of the war on Russian and Ukrainian criminal activities.
What we do know is that many people turn to cybercrime because it pays. Tech layoffs, slowing economies, crypto losses, and a Russia in tatters from a protracted war all point to a growing army of disenfranchised people with technology skills – people who will do what it takes to feed themselves and their families. And the more people who enter the cybercrime community, the more cybercrime we’re likely to see.
Inflation isn’t happening – yet – on the dark web, but that’s not to say it won’t. When the last global economic downturn occurred in 2008, the dark web didn’t exist as it does today, so we have no precedent to guide our expectations. Perhaps the underground will respond to what’s happening, but with a delayed reaction.
Monitoring the chatter and the trends on the dark web is critically important, perhaps now more than ever. Nothing is stable, including the currency the dark web community relies upon.
Using threat intelligence tools that can access the dark and deep web is a must for any enterprise. With the ability to peer into the cybercrime underground, you’ll see what’s happening as it occurs and fend off threats proactively rather than merely waiting for breach attempts and attacks.
For leading organizations today, threat intelligence is a must for early, real-time visibility. Only a few solutions can access the dark web, however. To find threats before they find you, the dark web is where you need to be – and Cybersixgill can put you there.