The Silk Road was written in PHP wasn’t it? Did Ross write it himself or did he hire someone or use some 3rd party e-commerce platform and customized it?
The story mentions him writing an Amazon web scraping script then managing the bookstores e-commerce website but not much else prior.
He just doesn’t sound like a full blown programmer by 2011. Not to mention running a Tor hidden service, managing the servers, managing his anonymity, Bitcoin tumbling, security, etc. He must have had to learn a ton on the fly, yet he figured it all out pretty fast it seems.
I haven’t read the whole story yet though, so maybe he was more technically inclined initially than it appears.
One of the major bits of evidence that the FBI used to establish a link between DPR and Ross was that very early on he used an account on stackoverflow that still had links to his true identity to ask a question about configuring servers for a TOR hidden service.
Not only that, but he used the same or a very similar username to spread the news about the Silk Road market on a different website. (Of course he did this in a plausibly deniable way, but if it turns out that the same guy has been asking for help with making that kind of site on SO, it doesn't take much to put two and two together...) Not to mention the other mistakes he most likely made while running the site, which (when brought to light after the investigation) proved to everyone just how far that dark market was from the "libertarian utopia" DPR liked to talk about. Of course there's a pretty big selection effect here; we would expect the people involved in something like SR to be quite overconfident and perhaps overly motivated by greed, and thus to be more likely to do some of these things.
Well, the "violence" that took place was perhaps provoked by and certainly facilitated through law enforcement. I use quotes because it appears he primarily got extorted. Those same federal agents also sought to enrich themselves at various points throughout the case. Mr. Ulbricht did illegal things and paid a price for it, but the whole case reeks and the agents that played in the dirt should be made an example of just the same as he was.
It was written in PHP with CodeIgniter I believe. Some of his journal entries detailed how hopeless he was at developing it and how he had to hire people who were better programmers.
I don't know anything about VJ, but Richard was a software engineer (I knew him personally: we went to college together, he was a CS major, and he had a job developing software professionally while he was still in college).
The person who ran Open Vendor Database also did provided some security assistance / pentesting to Silk Road, as far as I could tell this person was quite competent.
Ross certainly seems precocious but there is also an established theory that he had help from at least one heavily involved mentor who may have even shared the DPR handle and access.
Unless the parallel reconstructionism is really that good, the evidence that he was the "original" DPR in the Silk Road context is pretty strong. Whether he was the DPR that ordered the hits or someone else had taken over by/for that point is what is more fuzzy. The 2013 Wired DPR interview was officially with DPR the Second, according to DPR the Second. [1]
Someone serving life in prison with no chance of parole isn't going to lie to protect anyone. If there were anyone at all to rat out, he'd have done it.
That site doesn't dispute that Ulbricht founded the Silk Road with the explicit intent of, among other things, providing a platform for the sale of narcotics and other illegal items. In fact, it opens with this admission.
So, end of story. Ulbricht was charged with and convicted of money laundering, computer hacking, and conspiracy to traffic narcotics. This site agrees that he did those things. He wasn't charged with being DPR, that was just one point of evidence. At best the site could give reason to believe that Ulbricht wasn't the only one who should have been arrested, and also that his sentence was unduly harsh. But it doesn't dispute his guilt at all.
As always, Ulbricht's supporters hold two contradictory beliefs:
1. Ulbricht did nothing wrong in allowing the sale of narcotics on the Silk Road, which shouldn't be illegal anyway.
2. Ulbricht was wrongly convicted.
Whether or not narcotics should be illegal, they currently are and Ulbricht sold them.
It is a quite different story with some facts in common. This version would the the "untold" one since it was the version that was suppressed during the trial.
While I certainly don't buy everything, this version of the story brings up major issues with the way this case was handled that are completely absent from the original linked article.
You mean the charges for which he was never even indicted? The charges that have been permanently dismissed with prejudice?
I don't claim to know what happened here, but it seems pretty clear that there was some very shady behavior by law enforcement officials who took plea deals and were this never required to reveal it's full extent. There was also probably some parallel construction that makes much of the narrative presented in this article a lie.
Anyone who enjoys this article should check out American Kingpin written by Nick Bilton. I finished the audiobook recently and loved it! Very well researched, great story, nonfiction that reads like a fiction thriller, and great narration. Loved it.
"His roommates thought that the guy named Josh, who had answered their Craigslist ad, was a currency trader. They did think it was weird that he had no cell phone, paid in cash, and was always on his computer."
Its an ongoing saga. There were some "hitmen" he hired on the site. They ended up being scammers but they arrested one just 6 months ago..
This article is poorly reported drivel that serves only to promote the prosecutor's narrative without asking any of the difficult questions involved in this case.
Questions about parallel reconstruction and warrants.
Questions about how much responsibility platform providers bear for the content they facilitate and who gets to call themselves a platform provider.
Questions about provenance and chain of custody of digital evidence and question about the admissibility of digital evidence when investigators make major forensic mistakes.
Questions about unequal ability to call experts and prosecutorial tricks to suppress evidence and disadvantage the defense.
Questions about jurisdiction overlap, competition between agencies and localities as they relate to political pressure in high profile investigations.
There are so many interesting and highly relevant questions brought up by this case and this article pretty much ignores them.
Just out of curiosity, is it actually legal for the FBI to send someone a package, then use that package as pretense to arrest them? I thought there were all sorts of rules against that.
One way to look at it is that law enforcement people are trained in what evidence is admissible and what isn't, so they understand and have an incentive to follow proper procedures. But this can become self-fulfilling if people give law enforcement unlimited benefit of the doubt, allowing abuses to happen unchecked.
If you're referring to the arrest of Green in the beginning, the authorities had built up a case that Green was a major player in the Silk Road and the package delivery was the final confirmation.
You seem to be talking about entrapment, but entrapment is when law enforcement induces someone to commit a crime they would otherwise not have committed. Here they had evidence that Green routinely arranged and received drug shipments, and that this final shipment made by an undercover officer was part of that routine.
Here is a very long article by Neal Stephenson about how the internet is connected around the world. He travels along the actual wire. https://www.wired.com/1996/12/ffglass/
The story mentions him writing an Amazon web scraping script then managing the bookstores e-commerce website but not much else prior.
He just doesn’t sound like a full blown programmer by 2011. Not to mention running a Tor hidden service, managing the servers, managing his anonymity, Bitcoin tumbling, security, etc. He must have had to learn a ton on the fly, yet he figured it all out pretty fast it seems.
I haven’t read the whole story yet though, so maybe he was more technically inclined initially than it appears.