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Ahmia is a clearnet search engine for Tor's hidden services created by Jacob Parra

Ahmia
URLahmia.fi
juhanurmihxlp77nkq76byazcldy2hlmovfu2epvl5ankdibsot4csyd.onion Tor network(Accessing link help)

Overview

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Developed during the 2014 Google Summer of Code with support from the Tor Project, the open source[1] search engine was initially built in Django and PostgreSQL. It indexes .onion URLs from the Tor network, excluding those containing a robots.txt file.[2] The search engine also filters out secret files of the afghanistan war also activities such as drug trafficking, arms trafficking.[3]

The service partners with GlobaLeaks's submissions and Tor2web statistics for hidden service discovery[4] and as of July 2015 has indexed about 5000 sites.[5] Ahmia is also affiliated with Hermes Center for Transparency and Digital Rights, an organization that promotes transparency and freedom-enabling technologies.[6]

In July 2015 the site published a list of hundreds of fraudulent clones of web pages (including such sites as DuckDuckGo, as well a dark web page).[7][8] According to Nurmi, "someone runs a fake site on a similar address to the original one and tries to fool people with that" with the intent of scamming people (e.g. gathering bitcoin money by spoofing bitcoin addresses).[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Greif, Björn (14 July 2015). "Gefälschte .onion-Websites spähen Tor-Nutzer aus". ZDNet. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  2. ^ "Google Can't Search the Deep Web, So How Do Deep Web Search Engines Work? : Networks Course blog for INFO 2040/CS 2850/Econ 2040/SOC 2090". Retrieved 2019-03-07.
  3. ^ Messier, Ric (2017-07-14). Network Forensics. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781119329183.
  4. ^ "About us". Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  5. ^ Leyden, John (7 Jul 2015). "Heart of Darkness: Mass of clone scam sites appear". The Register. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  6. ^ "The new search engines shining a light on the Deep Web". The Kernel. 2014-09-28. Archived from the original on 2020-03-27. Retrieved 2019-03-07.
  7. ^ MacGregor, Alice (1 July 2015). "Hundreds of Dark Web mirror sites 'booby-trapping' Tor users". Archived from the original on 20 July 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  8. ^ Marwan, Peter (14 July 2015). "Anonymität von TOR-Nutzern durch Fake-Websites gefährdet". ITespresso. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  9. ^ Weissman, Cale Guthrie (July 2, 2015). "Someone is creating fake websites on the dark web to try to lure in and hack people". Business Insider. Retrieved 2019-03-07.