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by kbenson
3313 days ago
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> Darknet markets have reputation systems, and have already figured this out. But again, why should I trust a darknet? What makes a group of criminals trustworthy when a single one isn't? You haven't really addressed the fundamental problem of trust, just kicked it down the road to a new point. Any legitimate entity seeing usage in an effort to authenticate a criminal will likely be seeing subpoenas for access information. If they are resistant to those subpoenas, then they are helping the criminals, and are acting illegally. Both states have severe negatives for one of the parties. |
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Only a small fraction of trust among non-criminals is backed by force of law. The rest is backed by past record. If you don't have one, you put up collateral, get someone else to stake you (e.g. loan co-signers), or start small until people get to know you.
The only real question here is how you verify who you're dealing with. That's doable, and once it's done everything else is a pretty established process.