Keep in mind that that's two ounces of electrons, the energy stored there would be a downer on any drinking... Or life for whoever touched it for that matter...
If you think the Dark Web won't scare you because you've been reading creepypastas, watching horror movies or anything similar, you're gonna have a bad time
+Chibis On The Loose Ive only seen a few seconds of a clip and then was told the rest of the video verbally and the story behind it, I was scared for weeks about it lol.
+Chibis On The Loose well, it's pretty hard to just stumble upon the bad stuff. There aren't big "click here to hire hit men" buttons (unless they're trapped ). I go on the dark web every once in a while, not too scary to be honest. Lots of trapped drug sites, fake hit men and 12 year olds that think they can hack because they installed a minecraft mod.
+Chibis On The Loose I've heard of bad shit on the normal internet, how much worse can it get? 2 guys 1 hammer, those mexicunt cartels beheading people with chainsaws, all of which I avoid, but how bad is it? Does it have lots of cool books and resources?
Aguila701 The worst one can expect is probably the worst the human mind can think of. Swaglord350 It should have interesting books and stuff too. Of course it isn't only gross and scary stuff, but since there is no regulation, it's not that hard to stumble upon some Graham Bhuyan Of course, if you are aware of what you're getting into, the Deep Web won't be that bad. But, unfortunately, many people are not, so I have to say it
Scary thought: An alien race doesn't need to visit earth to learn about us. They would just need to connect to our internet... ... all those twerking and cat vids... o_O"
"The internet is not good or bad. The internet is a tool that can be used for good or bad. And it's not just one thing, it's all of the things humanity can be, reflected digitally." - Trace Dominguez Thank you Mr. Domiguez
IPv6 also uses Hexidecimal numbers, which are base 16 instead of base 10 like the kind we usually read and count by; it has 0-9, but then it goes A-F before it adds another diget. So, for example, ten in Hexidecimal is written "A", fifteen is "F", seventeen is "11", and one-hundred-seventy-two is "AC". That makes the number of possible addresses even *more* incomprehensibly huge.
Well, the media (traditional TV and Radio media) have a vested interest in painting the internet as a creepy place that you don't want to be. The internet would put TV and radio out of business completely if everyone knew how to use it. You can use services like Netflix and Hulu to watch whatever episode of a show that you want, whenever, instead of waiting for the network to air it. Sites like soundcloud and even TH-cam pose a threat to radio because you can get any song at anytime for free. And if you dont want to pay for some of these services, piracy is becoming easier for the laymen every year. AM radio talk shows are mostly dead already, but there are thousands of podcasts on the internet, so you can listen to any point of view anytime. If old people knew how to use the internet, FOX News would be gone within a year.
Whoa, that's expensive asf, I pay like 12 USD for internet and cable television and the internet is quite good, If I opt for the best internet and digital(HD) television It will go around 25 USD.
I've worked for many large IT companies... the internet is a vast strange place. I've worked for Yahoo, Earthlink, New Edge, Dotster (Domain Registrar), and others. Soooo much data out there, soo many strange websites. People don't realize how many websites are out there. Dotster, and it's sub companies, only controls about 3% of the registered domains globally. That number alone is staggering. GoDaddy holds the most, but they are kind of evil. Also that IPv6 thing is a pain in the ass no matter where you work, no one wants to implement it, even though the hardware has been supporting it for years. I think IPV6 accounts for as many IP addresses as there are molecules in your body, it's a huge Hex number. Also, you can pad out any IPv4 address into a 6, so it's easy to convert.
Interesting that Israel and Italy (Rome perhaps?) are the biggest users of TOR. Coming in 3rd is Moldavia; a tiny Russian republic. Just interesting. The US has only a 25-50 percentile usage rate, which I find is even more interesting given that it was developed by the US Naval research. Very mind boggling . . .
Just to clarify something Trace said in the video. IPv6 isn't JUST an extra two groups of numbers. There are also more characters used in this iteration including letters, while IPv4 just had numbers. This means the number of possible IPv6 addresses just got a whooooole lot bigger.
IPv6 doesn't "allow letters". Both IPv4 and IPv6 are a list of bytes (numbers from 0 to 255), and IPv4 has 4 bytes (192.168.0.1) and IPv6 has 6 bytes. These bytes can also be written in hexadecimal instead of decimal, so 192 is C0. They're just different notations to write the same numbers. C0 (base16) and 192 (base10) are the same number. C0 has no letters in it. Since digits go to 9, hexadecimal uses A-F for 11-15. They could've invented new glyphs, but it seemed easier to use A-F, as long folks reading it remember that they're not letters, they're 11-15. Either way, base10, or base16, you're limited to 0..255 for 1 byte.
Also things that have been issues before are the dynamic routing protocols used on the internet such as BGP. I saw one article said some older routers almost caused huge issues due to this. They reached something like 500,000 routes in their routing databases and ran out of memory. That number may not sound huge, but a lot of things especially if it's like internet backbone will have vague summery routes saying if you want like .1 go out here, .2 go out here and those could then have sub networks like .1.1, etc.
Fun fact (just to nitpick on what you noted, Trace): Eric Schmidt hasn't been the CEO of Google for quite some time now. In fact, for almost two CEO generations already. Google has since been run by co-founder Larry Page for years now, until he gave that up to move up as CEO of Alphabet, the umbrella company that "owns" Google, whose now-designated CEO is now Sundar Pichai. Eric Schmidt has been its exec. chairman since.
And, it is publicly known that using Tor isn't entirely secure (as shown by many articles now, and as you know by how people are caught), as you can be found by authorities if necessary, just that it is normally harder for the casual user to do so.
Are you referring to 200tb on just hyper links and the tittle of the actual description of the content behind the link?? Because 200tb in retained data seem a bitttttt to litttlleeee like to little.
I.Pv4 has held on much longer than most thought in the 90s because so many places use port address translation on routers. I saw something that said there are enough I.Pv6 addresses to address like every grain of sand on earth surface. I calculated it out once and I did an I.Pv7 to KG mass of earth and it came out to like 4 addresses per HG of earth mass. According to some industry people there is already plans for space links to like mars, etc. Also I.Pv6 uses hex instead of doted decimal which to my understanding is also a significant expansion on the number of addresses.
Hey trace! I have an idea for a topic. Comedy! why we laugh, types of comedy and why we enjoy it so much and something i've always wondered, why is slapstick comedy funny and why we laugh when we see others get hurt. If you see this please consider it! Also it'd help for my director studies on slapstick directors and why they create these films other than just earning money :D! thanks!
3:45 Not true. Those servers used by TOR to communicated aren't all owned by nice people who want to help you. If you acces your bank account with TOR, be prepared to loose all your money. It is not a gov who'll spy on you, but a random hacker who own a node of the TOR network.
+Walz There's such a thing as HTTPS. It ain't perfect but still... Whatever you do, all that traffic goes through computers somewhere. HTTPS is kinda broken tho... DNSSEC was supposed to fix it but nope. But -> okturtles.com/
Tor is not secure. Tor cannot and does not attempt to protect against monitoring of traffic at the boundaries of the Tor network (i.e., the traffic entering and exiting the network). While Tor does provide protection against traffic analysis, it cannot prevent traffic confirmation (also called end-to-end correlation)
Not exactly accurate about VPN's. Through deep packet inspection, your surfing history can be revealed, depending on how long the government tells the ISP's to hold your usage. If you use ToR, which was created by the U.S. government, you are automatically flagged and could be targeted for further inspection by various agencies. Some linux distros with ToR also make it easy to mask your mac address, but again, that can also be flagged. If you're trying to do illegal things on the web, you'll get caught eventually. VPN's are really great in general though, because it does encrypt your traffic. The ISP's in most states aren't allowed to access your deep packet inspection data, so if they chose to illegally give priority traffic to certain sites, they wouldn't know to slow down your connection. VPN's are also a must imho when using public wifi.
Id love to see a video on the next (most likely) steps humanity will take (in order) to further our selves in the universe, such as will the earth come together under one government and when, or when we will achieve a well established planet migration. where we will end up, will we die out beforehand? All of these with ideas researched intensely with others point of views would be very interesting
+TestTube Plus It's not so easy that they just add two more sections to IPv4 to get IPv6 even it would make sense. They actually changed a lot around the infrastructure of IPv4 like using hex-numbers instead of decimal-numbers. For all who want to know more about that stuff: electronicdesign.com/embedded/whats-difference-between-ipv4-and-ipv6 And we only run out on the public IPv4 adresses. The private ones are still good for every size of company but since more and more companies pop up and all of them need at least one address to be reachable for the internet we run out on the public ones. In fact if we wouldn't seperated the iPv4 adresses into private and public we would ran out even faster since IPv4 has only 4,294,967,296 possible adresses which would mean that only 4,294,967,296 devices could access the internet. By the way IPv6 has 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 possible adresses. "It's crazy, right?" ;) (if anyone sees an error in this comment feel free to correct it) ;)
Actually it is possible for the government to know exactly what you're doing on Tor. Matter of fact, it's easy. Just to give you an idea: When you first launch Tor browser, it launches in a window with a rez smaller than your monitor. As soon as you fullscreen it, Tor will give you a popup that will tell you not to put it in fullscreen as trackers can in fact zone you out just because of your monitor resolution. The coding of the software makes it so it recognizes your monitor resolution thus matching it should you decide to apply the fullscreen function. This guy on reddit put in into good words: " Tor Browser tries to make everyone appear exactly the same, so websites can't track you based on your these properties." That's just ONE thing that anyone anywhere can use to track you. Tor is indeed an encrypted browser made to be anonymous, but it's not at all effective if you're conducting fishy business. If you're just snooping around trynna find websites (like me, I've been on silkroad a few times just to have a look around, see how things work cause I was curious but never dared to contact anyone nor purchase anything) then it's fine. Consider this, it's being a 12 yr old waltzing into a liquor store, looking at the bottles and reading the the stickers on said bottles but putting them back on the shelf and walking out empty handed. No crime in that, right? Well it depends. Silkroad is merely a drug trafficking website. People from all over the world put their products on the site (this is a matter of public record for those who don't know, you can literally google the URL and you'll find dozens of articles talking about it and even given you the link to access the website, check it out for yourself) and selling them all over the world. Some only ship in the U.S, some only ship in Canada (btw that's how I realized that the drug trafficking business was even bigger than I ever thought it was JUST in Canada, it blew my mind) some ship all over the place. They're just drugs. In the grand scheme of things, the drug business is a warm melting ice cream cone on a hot summer day in July. There are websites (I don't know which and never wish to know) that do the same thing but with human, organ, child trafficking and many more. There are websites that are basically hubs for people to gather round and auction for ladies and people will literally come and deliver the girl you paid for. There are websites that psychos launch, like Twitch.tv, where they stream themselves torturing and killing innocent people while viewers sit there and recommend things they want to see him do to that poor soul. The dark web is fucked up and that's why if you want to snoop around, a mere browser isn't enough. You need a VPN, a proper mac/Ip spoofer, a remote connection even, never conduct searches on the same computer twice, never conduct said searches in your own domicile and the list goes on and on. And even then, your identity can STILL be revealed. Keep in mind that the best of the best, the TOPGUN of hackers and cyber security analysts and operators work for the government, and the govy as more money and resources than you can possibly dream of. That's not true for all countries, but it is for many. When you pick a fight with the government, it's no longer a story of how well you're juking them but rather a long you can keep doing it. They will find you. They always do. The biggest hackers were all caught at one point or another. Digital footprints make more noise than a gunshot.
Edit: And for those who think that watching your weird porn on Tor is safe, it's not. While Tor uses a search engine called Duckduckgo.com (basically Google but they don't record what you type in the search bar, you can use it on any browser: Firefox, Chrome, Explorer although idk what kinda living-under-a-rock idiot would even want to use Explorer,) even if Tor browser "hides" you and duckduckgo.com doesn't track you, the websites still store data on their users. They still collect the IP addresses of their visitors and such. That's why when you go on the site, you have search preferences that aren't even listed or things that you didn't even want the website to save. I mean you are still connecting your computer to a remote server, that leaves a digital footprint! If they want to find out what kind of Yaoi furry you like to watch, they will :) Moral of the story, switch from Google and go for DuckDuckgo.com, it's the same but better :D
Terms like "deep" and "dark" are unnecessarily mysterious and intimidating. Marketing or propaganda for censorship could use them. If a resource is stored on a server that requires a login, that's all it is. If a different protocol was used to communicate information, such as e-mail in a database, chat traffic, or videos shared over p2p, then it is part of the Internet, but not the "web", and thus out of scope for Google, which only indexes a collection of HTML pages. People often tend to think as the whole internet being on the web, cos they only access it via a browser, and not other kinds of software servers/clients. But as long as Google hasn't published those e-mails on a public website, they are stored on disks/clouds somewhere, but do not exist at all on the web. The number of IP addresses does not practically limit the "size" of the internet in bytes or electrons. You can have one IP serve a very large amount of information (web or other protocols), subdividing the load via either NAT or reverse proxies or both to many servers behind that one IP. While IPv6 has an astronomical number of combinations, they seem wasted as currently used by many ISPs: the actual address is only half as long - 64 bits, which would be enough for everybody and not as difficult to remember. But it is also treated like the old IPs: _it is dynamic_ and changes from time to time. So that problem isn't solved. I'm happy with my static compact four octet address.
Don't the measurements of bytes go up thousands? I thought 1000 bytes = 1 MB, 1000 megabytes = 1 GB, 1000 Gigabytes = 1 TB?
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now this is neat because all the creepypastas i have heard here on youtube and even warning videos made me think that ppl could trace you when you are on the darkweb (i have thor and i have sort of surfed around a few times)
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+blacklight well then, time to have a bit of a dive back, I guess ^^
Being a network administrator this video gave me cancer -_- We ran out of IPV4 addresses before this video was made, Ipv6 isn't as complicated as he is making it sounds, yes it requires different hardware but otherwise it is easier to deal with all together.
+FallenAngel89 same! wonder if trace would have to stick by the magicians code and not reveal any tricks.. lol seriously though there are still ordinary people today that practice witchcraft and voodoo. and then theres how magicians are so good at slight of hand...
The government can set up a tor node and find out what you're viewing, as well as busting in people's homes and taking people's tor nodes. Just an FYI.
CEO of Google is Sundar Pichai, Eric Schmidt is the executive chairman of Alphabet Inc Google's new official parent company ( started by the founders of Google) Schmidt was however CEO of Google from 2001-2011
Changging to IPV6 from IPV4 whoul NOT necessearly require to replace your devices, simply just update the firmware, but this WILL NOT happen, because the companies who produce those routers, switches, hubs, etc., WILL WANT YOU to spend more money on buying a new product. So theoretically you are wrong, but practically you are right.
My favorite website? Hmm. Not sure. Used to be grooveshark. Now its probably a book or anime site. I was once fond of mangafox. I'm not sure what I favor now.
"I could drink the entire internet" - Quote of the day.
+Eric Champlin Do you think he would get indigestion from drinking the internet?
Only if they were fluid ounces!
Keep in mind that that's two ounces of electrons, the energy stored there would be a downer on any drinking... Or life for whoever touched it for that matter...
Nice way to sum up the internet "The internet isn't good or bad, just a tool that reflects what man kind can do."
If you think the Dark Web won't scare you because you've been reading creepypastas, watching horror movies or anything similar, you're gonna have a bad time
+Chibis On The Loose Ive only seen a few seconds of a clip and then was told the rest of the video verbally and the story behind it, I was scared for weeks about it lol.
SparkSkel Yep, there's some dark shit there
+Chibis On The Loose well, it's pretty hard to just stumble upon the bad stuff. There aren't big "click here to hire hit men" buttons (unless they're trapped ). I go on the dark web every once in a while, not too scary to be honest. Lots of trapped drug sites, fake hit men and 12 year olds that think they can hack because they installed a minecraft mod.
+Chibis On The Loose I've heard of bad shit on the normal internet, how much worse can it get? 2 guys 1 hammer, those mexicunt cartels beheading people with chainsaws, all of which I avoid, but how bad is it?
Does it have lots of cool books and resources?
Aguila701 The worst one can expect is probably the worst the human mind can think of.
Swaglord350 It should have interesting books and stuff too. Of course it isn't only gross and scary stuff, but since there is no regulation, it's not that hard to stumble upon some
Graham Bhuyan Of course, if you are aware of what you're getting into, the Deep Web won't be that bad. But, unfortunately, many people are not, so I have to say it
Scary thought:
An alien race doesn't need to visit earth to learn about us. They would just need to connect to our internet...
... all those twerking and cat vids... o_O"
omg... what if first thing aliens saw was nikki minaj and miley cyrus.... xD
+James Vasa IMA FIRRRRING MAH LASSSAAARRSS BLAAAAAA
lol. I'd kill us too if thats all i saw.
+FrozenEternity Not possible lmao
+FrozenEternity And Dr Richard Feinman wondered why aliens have never tried to contact us.
+BLDalton85 Gaming I laughed way to hard at this, Thanks though mate :P
"The internet is not good or bad. The internet is a tool that can be used for good or bad. And it's not just one thing, it's all of the things humanity can be, reflected digitally."
- Trace Dominguez
Thank you Mr. Domiguez
the tor network is not a vpn its a proxy
+The Anonymous Viewer Tor = Amazing :D
+The Anonymous Viewer They both do pretty much the same thing, though. Although a VPN encrypts all data from end-to-end.
+AShoppingCartGLX meh. The cocaine is nothing special. Their AKs are substandard but they get the job done.
+The Anonymous Viewer the tor network is a VPN
+Alex Carter I guess he should have said or because the "&" implies you use both of them
Thank you for choosing my topic proposal and talk about the internet! Very interesting things discussed.
+Vlad Nicolaescu Seriously good topic choice too!
IPv6 also uses Hexidecimal numbers, which are base 16 instead of base 10 like the kind we usually read and count by; it has 0-9, but then it goes A-F before it adds another diget. So, for example, ten in Hexidecimal is written "A", fifteen is "F", seventeen is "11", and one-hundred-seventy-two is "AC". That makes the number of possible addresses even *more* incomprehensibly huge.
I love how he made a Harry Potter reference at 3:20! The Dark Web is like Knockturn Alley lol
Well, the media (traditional TV and Radio media) have a vested interest in painting the internet as a creepy place that you don't want to be. The internet would put TV and radio out of business completely if everyone knew how to use it. You can use services like Netflix and Hulu to watch whatever episode of a show that you want, whenever, instead of waiting for the network to air it. Sites like soundcloud and even TH-cam pose a threat to radio because you can get any song at anytime for free. And if you dont want to pay for some of these services, piracy is becoming easier for the laymen every year. AM radio talk shows are mostly dead already, but there are thousands of podcasts on the internet, so you can listen to any point of view anytime.
If old people knew how to use the internet, FOX News would be gone within a year.
Ibraheem Productions Netflix is like $11 a month. Cable is, at the cheapest and without any other features, is at at least $30 a month,
Whoa, that's expensive asf, I pay like 12 USD for internet and cable television and the internet is quite good, If I opt for the best internet and digital(HD) television It will go around 25 USD.
wow google know less than 1% of the internet.wow so much porn hidden.
The Deadpool. Eww...good thing it stays hidden..
+The Deadpool. What is necrophilia? Something to do with dead people?
+Superawesomness321 having sex with a corpse
+Superawesomness321 ussualy involves organs getting ejected from the body
+Rudy Krish oh there a lot more. bestiality, incest, mutilation, torture and a lot of stuff that makes me wanna puke
I've worked for many large IT companies... the internet is a vast strange place. I've worked for Yahoo, Earthlink, New Edge, Dotster (Domain Registrar), and others. Soooo much data out there, soo many strange websites. People don't realize how many websites are out there. Dotster, and it's sub companies, only controls about 3% of the registered domains globally. That number alone is staggering. GoDaddy holds the most, but they are kind of evil. Also that IPv6 thing is a pain in the ass no matter where you work, no one wants to implement it, even though the hardware has been supporting it for years. I think IPV6 accounts for as many IP addresses as there are molecules in your body, it's a huge Hex number. Also, you can pad out any IPv4 address into a 6, so it's easy to convert.
So.... How much of the internet is hidden?
+Randomstuffs261 96% Source 10 Disturbing facts about the deep web. They got that answer from the source is from BBC.
+Randomstuffs261 Roughly about 99%.
+Prussia - 0,004% is indexed in Google.
+Randomstuffs261 About 98% of the internet is hidden, all the search engines combined adds up to roughly 2% of the indexed internet.
+Randomstuffs261 about 2 meters
Interesting that Israel and Italy (Rome perhaps?) are the biggest users of TOR. Coming in 3rd is Moldavia; a tiny Russian republic. Just interesting. The US has only a 25-50 percentile usage rate, which I find is even more interesting given that it was developed by the US Naval research. Very mind boggling . . .
Just to clarify something Trace said in the video. IPv6 isn't JUST an extra two groups of numbers. There are also more characters used in this iteration including letters, while IPv4 just had numbers. This means the number of possible IPv6 addresses just got a whooooole lot bigger.
IPv6 doesn't "allow letters". Both IPv4 and IPv6 are a list of bytes (numbers from 0 to 255), and IPv4 has 4 bytes (192.168.0.1) and IPv6 has 6 bytes. These bytes can also be written in hexadecimal instead of decimal, so 192 is C0. They're just different notations to write the same numbers. C0 (base16) and 192 (base10) are the same number. C0 has no letters in it. Since digits go to 9, hexadecimal uses A-F for 11-15. They could've invented new glyphs, but it seemed easier to use A-F, as long folks reading it remember that they're not letters, they're 11-15. Either way, base10, or base16, you're limited to 0..255 for 1 byte.
Home star runner!!! Oh man you just transported me back to the glorious 90s.
Also things that have been issues before are the dynamic routing protocols used on the internet such as BGP. I saw one article said some older routers almost caused huge issues due to this. They reached something like 500,000 routes in their routing databases and ran out of memory. That number may not sound huge, but a lot of things especially if it's like internet backbone will have vague summery routes saying if you want like .1 go out here, .2 go out here and those could then have sub networks like .1.1, etc.
Fun fact (just to nitpick on what you noted, Trace): Eric Schmidt hasn't been the CEO of Google for quite some time now. In fact, for almost two CEO generations already. Google has since been run by co-founder Larry Page for years now, until he gave that up to move up as CEO of Alphabet, the umbrella company that "owns" Google, whose now-designated CEO is now Sundar Pichai. Eric Schmidt has been its exec. chairman since.
Where do you get your t-shirts
It would be really cool if you did a video on the ways social media brings us farther apart or closer together!
you could drink it, but couldn't smoke it.
And, it is publicly known that using Tor isn't entirely secure (as shown by many articles now, and as you know by how people are caught), as you can be found by authorities if necessary, just that it is normally harder for the casual user to do so.
You have made me realize its not that people are stupid because of the internet its that people have always been stupid.
Does this mean we have merely given the stupid a voice?
Are you referring to 200tb on just hyper links and the tittle of the actual description of the content behind the link?? Because 200tb in retained data seem a bitttttt to litttlleeee like to little.
Microsoft bought 666K addresses - 5:55.
I.Pv4 has held on much longer than most thought in the 90s because so many places use port address translation on routers. I saw something that said there are enough I.Pv6 addresses to address like every grain of sand on earth surface. I calculated it out once and I did an I.Pv7 to KG mass of earth and it came out to like 4 addresses per HG of earth mass. According to some industry people there is already plans for space links to like mars, etc.
Also I.Pv6 uses hex instead of doted decimal which to my understanding is also a significant expansion on the number of addresses.
Hey trace! I have an idea for a topic. Comedy! why we laugh, types of comedy and why we enjoy it so much and something i've always wondered, why is slapstick comedy funny and why we laugh when we see others get hurt. If you see this please consider it! Also it'd help for my director studies on slapstick directors and why they create these films other than just earning money :D! thanks!
3:45 Not true.
Those servers used by TOR to communicated aren't all owned by nice people who want to help you.
If you acces your bank account with TOR, be prepared to loose all your money.
It is not a gov who'll spy on you, but a random hacker who own a node of the TOR network.
+Walz There's such a thing as HTTPS. It ain't perfect but still... Whatever you do, all that traffic goes through computers somewhere. HTTPS is kinda broken tho... DNSSEC was supposed to fix it but nope. But -> okturtles.com/
Tor is not secure. Tor cannot and does not attempt to protect against monitoring of traffic at the boundaries of the Tor network (i.e., the traffic entering and exiting the network). While Tor does provide protection against traffic analysis, it cannot prevent traffic confirmation (also called end-to-end correlation)
Not exactly accurate about VPN's. Through deep packet inspection, your surfing history can be revealed, depending on how long the government tells the ISP's to hold your usage. If you use ToR, which was created by the U.S. government, you are automatically flagged and could be targeted for further inspection by various agencies. Some linux distros with ToR also make it easy to mask your mac address, but again, that can also be flagged. If you're trying to do illegal things on the web, you'll get caught eventually. VPN's are really great in general though, because it does encrypt your traffic. The ISP's in most states aren't allowed to access your deep packet inspection data, so if they chose to illegally give priority traffic to certain sites, they wouldn't know to slow down your connection. VPN's are also a must imho when using public wifi.
Who does your after effects editing? I love the plexus stuff and I want to see what else they do
Will we run out of phone numbers? This also should be a mathematical formula.
Microsoft bought 666k addresses? Interesting,
Plot twist: The entire internet is a series of tubes
Id love to see a video on the next (most likely) steps humanity will take (in order) to further our selves in the universe, such as will the earth come together under one government and when, or when we will achieve a well established planet migration. where we will end up, will we die out beforehand? All of these with ideas researched intensely with others point of views would be very interesting
Is this the silkroad still avaible?
This was the subject one of the more recent Jack Reacher novels. It is titled 'Make Me' and was pretty good.
+TestTube Plus
It's not so easy that they just add two more sections to IPv4 to get IPv6 even it would make sense.
They actually changed a lot around the infrastructure of IPv4 like using hex-numbers instead of decimal-numbers.
For all who want to know more about that stuff: electronicdesign.com/embedded/whats-difference-between-ipv4-and-ipv6
And we only run out on the public IPv4 adresses. The private ones are still good for every size of company but since more and more companies pop up and all of them need at least one address to be reachable for the internet we run out on the public ones. In fact if we wouldn't seperated the iPv4 adresses into private and public we would ran out even faster since IPv4 has only 4,294,967,296 possible adresses which would mean that only 4,294,967,296 devices could access the internet.
By the way IPv6 has 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 possible adresses.
"It's crazy, right?" ;)
(if anyone sees an error in this comment feel free to correct it) ;)
3:49 Not even the GOVEMENT lol
Actually it is possible for the government to know exactly what you're doing on Tor. Matter of fact, it's easy. Just to give you an idea: When you first launch Tor browser, it launches in a window with a rez smaller than your monitor. As soon as you fullscreen it, Tor will give you a popup that will tell you not to put it in fullscreen as trackers can in fact zone you out just because of your monitor resolution. The coding of the software makes it so it recognizes your monitor resolution thus matching it should you decide to apply the fullscreen function. This guy on reddit put in into good words: " Tor Browser tries to make everyone appear exactly the same, so websites can't track you based on your these properties." That's just ONE thing that anyone anywhere can use to track you. Tor is indeed an encrypted browser made to be anonymous, but it's not at all effective if you're conducting fishy business. If you're just snooping around trynna find websites (like me, I've been on silkroad a few times just to have a look around, see how things work cause I was curious but never dared to contact anyone nor purchase anything) then it's fine. Consider this, it's being a 12 yr old waltzing into a liquor store, looking at the bottles and reading the the stickers on said bottles but putting them back on the shelf and walking out empty handed. No crime in that, right? Well it depends.
Silkroad is merely a drug trafficking website. People from all over the world put their products on the site (this is a matter of public record for those who don't know, you can literally google the URL and you'll find dozens of articles talking about it and even given you the link to access the website, check it out for yourself) and selling them all over the world. Some only ship in the U.S, some only ship in Canada (btw that's how I realized that the drug trafficking business was even bigger than I ever thought it was JUST in Canada, it blew my mind) some ship all over the place. They're just drugs. In the grand scheme of things, the drug business is a warm melting ice cream cone on a hot summer day in July.
There are websites (I don't know which and never wish to know) that do the same thing but with human, organ, child trafficking and many more. There are websites that are basically hubs for people to gather round and auction for ladies and people will literally come and deliver the girl you paid for.
There are websites that psychos launch, like Twitch.tv, where they stream themselves torturing and killing innocent people while viewers sit there and recommend things they want to see him do to that poor soul.
The dark web is fucked up and that's why if you want to snoop around, a mere browser isn't enough. You need a VPN, a proper mac/Ip spoofer, a remote connection even, never conduct searches on the same computer twice, never conduct said searches in your own domicile and the list goes on and on.
And even then, your identity can STILL be revealed. Keep in mind that the best of the best, the TOPGUN of hackers and cyber security analysts and operators work for the government, and the govy as more money and resources than you can possibly dream of. That's not true for all countries, but it is for many. When you pick a fight with the government, it's no longer a story of how well you're juking them but rather a long you can keep doing it. They will find you. They always do. The biggest hackers were all caught at one point or another. Digital footprints make more noise than a gunshot.
Edit: And for those who think that watching your weird porn on Tor is safe, it's not. While Tor uses a search engine called Duckduckgo.com (basically Google but they don't record what you type in the search bar, you can use it on any browser: Firefox, Chrome, Explorer although idk what kinda living-under-a-rock idiot would even want to use Explorer,) even if Tor browser "hides" you and duckduckgo.com doesn't track you, the websites still store data on their users. They still collect the IP addresses of their visitors and such. That's why when you go on the site, you have search preferences that aren't even listed or things that you didn't even want the website to save. I mean you are still connecting your computer to a remote server, that leaves a digital footprint! If they want to find out what kind of Yaoi furry you like to watch, they will :)
Moral of the story, switch from Google and go for DuckDuckgo.com, it's the same but better :D
Really interesting, awesome channel man!
Terms like "deep" and "dark" are unnecessarily mysterious and intimidating. Marketing or propaganda for censorship could use them. If a resource is stored on a server that requires a login, that's all it is. If a different protocol was used to communicate information, such as e-mail in a database, chat traffic, or videos shared over p2p, then it is part of the Internet, but not the "web", and thus out of scope for Google, which only indexes a collection of HTML pages. People often tend to think as the whole internet being on the web, cos they only access it via a browser, and not other kinds of software servers/clients. But as long as Google hasn't published those e-mails on a public website, they are stored on disks/clouds somewhere, but do not exist at all on the web.
The number of IP addresses does not practically limit the "size" of the internet in bytes or electrons. You can have one IP serve a very large amount of information (web or other protocols), subdividing the load via either NAT or reverse proxies or both to many servers behind that one IP.
While IPv6 has an astronomical number of combinations, they seem wasted as currently used by many ISPs: the actual address is only half as long - 64 bits, which would be enough for everybody and not as difficult to remember. But it is also treated like the old IPs: _it is dynamic_ and changes from time to time. So that problem isn't solved. I'm happy with my static compact four octet address.
Homestar Runner used to be awesome! I haven't been there since early highschool
Nice casual Intel plug at the end there. I almost didn't notice it.
I was singing "Tragdor" the other day and my 15 year old sister was so confused.
Don't the measurements of bytes go up thousands? I thought 1000 bytes = 1 MB, 1000 megabytes = 1 GB, 1000 Gigabytes = 1 TB?
now this is neat because all the creepypastas i have heard here on youtube and even warning videos made me think that ppl could trace you when you are on the darkweb (i have thor and i have sort of surfed around a few times)
+blacklight well then, time to have a bit of a dive back, I guess ^^
Being a network administrator this video gave me cancer -_- We ran out of IPV4 addresses before this video was made, Ipv6 isn't as complicated as he is making it sounds, yes it requires different hardware but otherwise it is easier to deal with all together.
Homestar Runner!!! I bought several of their DVDs because I loved them so much as a kid
7:40 I wonder if you could manipulate the Internet with you hands. Then it would be like Harry Potter!
I like to think of the internet as the Universal Conscienceness........
can you please do 5 episodes on magic please!?!?!
+Joseph Smith like witchcraft or boring magic tricks?
+FallenAngel89 both? different episodes?
James Vasa I guess it would fall under the same category, would definitely want to watch that series :)
+FallenAngel89 same! wonder if trace would have to stick by the magicians code and not reveal any tricks.. lol seriously though there are still ordinary people today that practice witchcraft and voodoo. and then theres how magicians are so good at slight of hand...
+Joseph Smith but real magic doesnt exist.
really nice content, cheers from qatar
Trogdor was a man.... or maybe he was a DRAGON MAN... uhh... maybe he was just a DRAGON... but he was still TROGDOR!
Nocturne Alley sounds like a pretty fun path to go down. ;D
In new York now we have to dial the area code. It's quite inconvenient
never thought of facebook as the deep web lol
If the internet were Everclear you would be messed up after drinking it.
When somebody references Harry Potter while talking about the internet = YESSSSSSSS!
I'm always so fascinated about the deep web, it's a very interesting topic. Also, I'm so happy you mentioned Homestarrunner!!! I loved that site XD
Nice! I was looking forward to this one.
Same
If you don't know how big is the internet, then how do you know that you indexed 0.004%. And is vsauce mentioned that internet is bout one ounce.
Is Tor legal? I mean I don't want to use it but just curious.
Interesting video. Thanks for the upload.
666,000 addresses?
Never ask the internet what their favorite website is!
The government can set up a tor node and find out what you're viewing, as well as busting in people's homes and taking people's tor nodes. Just an FYI.
CEO of Google is Sundar Pichai, Eric Schmidt is the executive chairman of Alphabet Inc Google's new official parent company ( started by the founders of Google) Schmidt was however CEO of Google from 2001-2011
Intel is your sponsor?! Wow!!! Great job!!
So I don't get it... There can be no more web addresses?
Can you tell me an example of deep and dark websites? just curious. thanx
child, gore, rape, murder porn
snuf, snuf cp, drugs, human trafficking, ect.
Eric Schmidt is the chairman of Google (I liked their old design better by the way). Larry Page is the CEO.
Is that a Harry Potter reference I hear at 3:20? :)
The Knockturn Alley of the web...love the Harry Potter reference!
I would like this channel a lot more without the 30 second Prius ad...
Well were in this topic you should cover Googles dark part "The human filter".
Next: Can the internet actually lose net neutrality globally?
This was a really good video.
Please make an extensive series of videos about North Korea!
so how do they know how big it is since they havent indexed it yet?
+kappa i think it is basically like reading a page of a book with 100 pages.
you know the no of pages but dont know what is in it.
"It's crazy"
- TestTube Plus guy.
This is like Arrow, every episode he says his name and the same things.
Why not index websites as soon as they are created.
You should really consider using animations in your videos
Hi test tube. Can you explain a bit more about the dark web? I've heard some weird things about it and I want to know if they are real.
Changging to IPV6 from IPV4 whoul NOT necessearly require to replace your devices, simply just update the firmware, but this WILL NOT happen, because the companies who produce those routers, switches, hubs, etc., WILL WANT YOU to spend more money on buying a new product.
So theoretically you are wrong, but practically you are right.
Eric Schmidt is no longer the CEO of Google.
Very appropriate Harry Potter reference!! I aprove.
Deep and dark web are two different terms that cannot be used interchangeably
VPN stuff is becoming more popular which is kinda cool but is probably still in the grey area but I'm very OK with that.
thank you! I have been enlighten
Wait, rabbits live in holes? Wtf?
Gmail is part of googles mass of servers not just one
This is the S.S. Home Star Runner...... It's .com!!! lmao
My favorite website? Hmm. Not sure. Used to be grooveshark. Now its probably a book or anime site.
I was once fond of mangafox. I'm not sure what I favor now.
is that a chromebook?
you could smoke the internet.
two ounces of deep hitter purples anyone?
It's not one million bytes it's a power of 2
The internet weighs 2oz.
i think alot of us allready have routers that have ipv6