Article 6RKAR The podcast Kill List doesn’t reflect badly on the internet – it reflects badly on us | John Naughton

The podcast Kill List doesn’t reflect badly on the internet – it reflects badly on us | John Naughton

by
John Naughton
from Technology | The Guardian on (#6RKAR)

A gripping audio series about a killer-for-hire scam on the dark web is a reminder of how technology holds up a mirror to human nature

This column comes to you as a break from listening to a riveting podcast series called Kill List. It's about a secret website that journalist and author Carl Miller discovered on the dark web, the slimy underbelly of the internet. The site essentially runs what one might call an assassination market" or a murder-for-hire service. Customers identify and profile someone whom they wish to have killed and pay (in bitcoin, natch) for the service they require. Hence the title of the podcast series.

The story starts in 2020 in the early days of the pandemic lockdown when a gifted IT expert and hacker, Chris Monteiro, was browsing the site and found a security vulnerability that, once exploited, gave him complete access to it. Inside, he found a kill list", rather like an Excel spreadsheet, of 175 people all over the world whom clients wanted murdered. For each target, there was usually lots of detailed information - address, photographs, habits, routes regularly travelled etc. It looked, I guess, superficially mundane - until you read the instructions" attached for each one. How much bitcoin should I pay?" Tell me the execution time in advance - I can't be there." I would just like this person to be shot and killed. Where, how and what with does not bother me at all." You get the idea.

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