Before You Watch Dark Net, Make Sure You've Seen Deep Web
A new Showtime series sounds pretty alarmist about everything that makes the Internet great.
In January, Showtime will air Dark Net, an eight-part reality show that will "cover deep web topics like bio-hacking, porn addiction, and the webcam sex trade."
From the writeup at The Wrap, it sounds like eight episodes of unrelieved hysteria jacked directly out of Janet Reno's cerebral cortex circa 1995.
The deep dive will also cover cyber-kidnapping, digital warfare, and online cults. Showtime states the new offering will reveal "a more ominous and disturbing perspective of a digitally connected world where our every action is collected and stored," a half-hour at a time.
Showtime promises that "Dark Net" will raise "cautionary, thought-provoking conversations about technology, privacy and how new, ever-expanding platforms are changing the way we live for the better and for worse."
For the better and for worse? I realize the need to sell the sizzle, but Dark Net sounds like it's loaded toward the latter, doesn't it?
Which is to say that Dark Net, despite being produced by the founder of Vocativ (a site that proudly "delivers news from the deep web") doesn't sound terribly original. Finally, a program that tackles online porn addiction, webcam businesss, and online cults! Again, paging Janet Reno.
Which isn't to say you shouldn't bother with Dark Net. It's just that you'd be wise to familiarize yourself with other documentaries of the same virtual space, especially Alex Winter's Deep Web, which debuted earlier this year and explores the world of Bitcoin, hacking, encryption, and related issues through the trial and conviction of Ross Ulbricht, the founder of Silk Road, the anonymous, extra-legal online market whose growth and success mainstreamed the concept of the dark net.
Judging from the iconography of the two products, it looks like Dark Net has been influenced at least in its graphic sensibilites by Deep Web. Yet from its promotional materials, it seems not to be overly interested in the former's critical-but-not-hysterical engagement with how individuals are using the deep web/dark net to create a world beyond the reach of meatspace regulators who mostly fear everything they don't understand.
Reason's Zach Weissmueller sat down with Winter in August to discuss the life sentence of Ulbricht and other topics. Watch below.
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Deep Web was pretty good, and pretty straight forward. There didn't seem to be much advocacy involved, but I'll admit maybe my bias made me blind to any Winter might have had.
I can do without the amped-up, scripted sensationalism of reality television. Plus, I don't subscribe to Showtime.
I watched Deep Web the other night. It was great, except for some Cosmo Midori drinking weirdo that appeared near the end.
Nothing screams "Justice!" like making an example of someone.
I love the smell of woodchippers in the morning. Smells like... justice.
cyber-kidnapping
You just said "cyber" and verb like you're playing Mad-Libs. Just like a child. You have the brain of a child. You do not have a high IQ, but you haphazardly came up with a new thing for clueless parents to panic about.
What a cyber-smackdown, bro.
"Cyber-kidnapping" sounds scary! Spend my money!
cyber kid napping - something made him get sleepy.
will you still be laughing when cyborgs steal your children, while robots steal your elderly mother's medication?
Is "former" the new "latter"?
"forma" is the new "latta"
My dictionary has 'having previously filled a particular role or been a particular thing' as the first definition rather than 'the first in a list of two items mentioned'. I can only assume, by the laws of irony, that the latter definition is the original definition.
Wait, that's us, isn't it?
When do I get my silver tunic?
They are just trying to get attention.
Deep Web? Jim, is that you? Probably not.
Do they use "encryption"?
Cuz that shit is powerful.
Yo, from a libertarian perspective, the Man in the High Castle is the shit. And just a good series, also. I really think it nails the reality of the world that the liberal fascists would LUUUUUUUUUURRRVE to have...
pretty much every film adaptation of philip k dick totally misses the point
This has been a most excellent adventure...
I predict a call for legislative action to save us from the CyberEvil this enlightening piece will undoubtedly expose.