We are used to
believe that what we see represents the ultimate truth. But, in many
cases, what we see is only the tip of the iceberg, the bigger part being
hidden or hard to discover. Such is the case with the Internet, or the
Web. For many out there, the Internet’s main piece is represented by
Google and other search engines, as these are the main tools to obtain
information from various websites.
What we know about the Internet is what website or database owners allow us to know. This is known and referred to as the Surface Web and represents that part of the web that is indexed by search engines. What doesn’t get indexed because its owners want to keep the information private and discrete is called the Deep Web (other synonyms: Deepnet, Invisible Web, Undernet, Hidden Web) and it actually represents the bigger part of the iceberg. What we know and see is only its tip.
Related Article: How to do Anonymous Web Surfing
But the Deep or Invisible Web can be browsed. Meet The Onion Router or Tor. It represents an American volunteer-run project based on free software that offers anonymous online communication. You’d be surprised to find out that many who use Tor are secret service “field agents”, “law enforcement officers”. Tor allows:

What we know about the Internet is what website or database owners allow us to know. This is known and referred to as the Surface Web and represents that part of the web that is indexed by search engines. What doesn’t get indexed because its owners want to keep the information private and discrete is called the Deep Web (other synonyms: Deepnet, Invisible Web, Undernet, Hidden Web) and it actually represents the bigger part of the iceberg. What we know and see is only its tip.
The Deep and Invisible Web
One of the most interesting definitions for the Invisible Web comes from Mike Bergman, founder of BrightPlanet:searching on the Internet today can be compared to dragging a net across the surface of the ocean: a great deal may be caught in the net, but there is a wealth of information that is deep and therefore missedThe Deep Web is also consisted of websites that require registrations and login, limited or scripted content and even websites that don’t have any hyperlinks pointing to them. From my point of view, a big part of the Deep Web should be perceived as the “undiscovered web”. It is thought that the Deep Web is the place where people use anonymity to share viruses and take part in other illegal activities such as forbidden types of pornography.
Related Article: How to do Anonymous Web Surfing
But the Deep or Invisible Web can be browsed. Meet The Onion Router or Tor. It represents an American volunteer-run project based on free software that offers anonymous online communication. You’d be surprised to find out that many who use Tor are secret service “field agents”, “law enforcement officers”. Tor allows:
officials to surf questionable websites and services without leaving tell-tale tracks, but also “activists and whistleblowers”, for example “environmental groups [who] are increasingly falling under surveillance in the US under laws meant to protect against terrorism”. Tor, in short, is used both by the American state and by some of its fiercest opponents. On the hidden internet, political life can be as labyrinthine as in a novel by Thomas Pynchon.
Interesting stats about the Hidden Web
For some, the hidden web is a great occasion to be able to surf anonymously, if they were to use such a tool as Tor. But for others, it represents the perfect environment to launch virus attacks or to do other illegal activities. As we’ve seen, it is even used by secret agents in their activities, so that they won’t leave tracks. Here are some more interesting stats about it- The Deep Web is is thought to be almost 500 times bigger than the World Wide Web
- The World Wide Web contains 19 terabytes of information whereas the Hidden Web has7,500 terabytes
- The Invisible Web has almost 550 billion individual documents and the WWW has 1 billion
- There are more than 200, 000 Deep Web websites
- The Deep Web represents the largest growing category with new information on the Internet.
- There is also quality content on the Deep Web and it is 1,000 to 2,000 times greater than the WWW
- The Deep Web seems to be very relevant to the information, as it doesn’t follow by search engines’ rules
- Even if it’s called the Invisible Web, 95% of it is public, free information
- scientists
- astronomers
- physicists
- sociologists
- and even revolutionaries
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