How to Navigate Dark Web Websites without Using the Tor Browser

Posted by Bruno Marcoux on March 11th, 2020

There is one software that has developed a unique way to access the Tor .onion Links or domains without using the Tor browser bundles while offering the same security and safe-havens. Dark web as you know is the underground or the underworld of the World Wide Web which is not known or heard while you’re discussing in general parlance among the public. In reality, this is the largest part of the internet, and is estimated that it makes up more than 95% of the internet. Just imagine how minute and tiny the surface web or the internet is when compared to the darknet.

Let’s take an example of a sea beach having a blue sky above. The upper surface is what you call the internet which is the maximum people use when we surf the internet. After the surface web comes the deep web which is represented by the layer of water where the ships and other boats tend to navigate and ferry people. The area where the sharks and other animals are found deep down is called the dark web. Both the dark and the deep in total are called the darknet. You need to have special software that is required to access these dark web directories which is called the Tor Browser. It is nothing but an updated version of Google Chrome that is used while browsing the surface web.

Why is Dark Web Essential?

While the dark web may be crawling with a list of services, it also has a lot to offer when it comes to sharing a real-life incident that takes place in authoritarian nations having heavy censorship. Tor browser evades this barrier by concealing the identification of both the parties i.e. sender and the receiver and breaks the censorship wall. The Tor browser offers anonymity and security to individuals surfing the internet without the fear that their internet traffic is being monitored by law enforcement and other government agency. Though the dark web is an area that is slightly known the majority of the .onion Links are hidden behind the Tor nodes.  Although you can get hold of the .onion Sites Link to locate any particular website is very hard to find as you need to have the correct address to locate the website you want to find or have an activity.

As the Tor .onion URL directories do not appear in Google databases or any other traditional and commercial search engines, it is impossible to enter the Darknet links alone by navigating throughout it. To actually log into any of the Best Dark Web Websites you have to first go to scouring the web looking and identifying .onion sites links, then start Tor and copy-paste into the address bar.

Onion City Search Engine (Deep Web)

Onion City is the search engine that is completely different from any other search engine and it is very similar to the Google search engine alongside not even needing Tor to properly browse the .onion hidden Links. Onion City is the search engine that crawls the Deep Web Links and Web Sites in a similar way that Google does it when it searches the surface web addresses. The search engine is actually developed by Virgil Griffith and it is a fresh way about how to search the dark web links.

Onion City crawls all the web pages and websites in the Darknet just like Google does, allowing users to search for their preferred website which they want to visit. Once all the addresses are fetched the search engine returns all the addresses that are there in the Onion database and shows it in the search results. The search engine uses the Tor2Web proxy, a project which allows internet users to access the .onion Hidden Link and allows the search engine to dig deep into Dark web directories whilst on the Tor anonymizing network. According to a recent study by researchers and academicians, the number of websites that are there in the onion city databases has crossed the 1 million mark.

The Onion City project is powered by the Tor2web proxy, which acts as a go-between the regular web and Tor network. The only difference that lies is that the extension will end with a ‘.city’ at the end instead of ending with the usual ‘.onion’ suffix.

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Bruno Marcoux

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Bruno Marcoux
Joined: February 14th, 2020
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