On Sunday, January 13, 2019, 7:44:21 PM PST, Mirimir <miri...@riseup.net> 
wrote:
 
 
 Dropgangs, or the future of dark markets


https://opaque.link/post/dropgang/

>Nice. It's cool to see serious tradecraft applied to this stuff.
Especially compartmentalization.

>And yes, using traditional shipping systems is a serious problem for
old-school dark markets. I've thought off and on for several years about
the potential for using dead drops with accurate GPS. I mean,
geocaching. Many years ago, when I was dealing LSD, it was pretty common
to use dead drops. But then, they were typically rental lockers in bus
and train stations.

>I agree that ubiquitous surveillance is a problem. However, it's
~clueless customers and low-level distributors who'll most likely get
pwned. And they won't know anything importnt about the operation overall.



Yes, I am also quite impressed at the amount of thought that has been put into 
this concept, see the link above.  I would be quite interested in helping in 
designing these systems, as I have been following some of the necessary 
technologies for years.  
I foresee a stiff plastic or metal pipe, tapered to a point at one end, which 
can be driven by force into soil or into a lawn, so that it ends up to be 
approximately flush with the plane of the soil.  Once placed, a smaller 
cylindrical container, as well as active elements, if needed, can be slid into 
the metal pipe, from above.   
>From the linked article:       https://opaque.link/post/dropgang/
"This challenge is met by Dropgangs in various ways. The primary one is that 
the documentation of each dead drop is conducted in minute detail, covering GPS 
coordinates, photos of the surrounding and the location, as well as photos of 
the concealment device in which the product is hidden (such as an empty coke 
can). The documentation however increases the risk for the Dropgang since 
whoever creates it would be more easy to identify by surveillance. In addition, 
even great documentation still requires the customer to understand it and 
follow it precisely, which can lead to suspicious behavior around the dead drop 
location (staring at photos, visually comparing them to the surrounding, etc)." 
            [end of partial quote]


Ordinarily, smartphones that use GPS, don't use accurizing features, such as 
WAAS.  (Wide Area Augmentation System). 
 See   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wide_Area_Augmentation_System  

WAAS correction data is probably already available on the Internet.

"Accuracy[edit]

The WAAS specification requires it to provide a position accuracy of 7.6 metres 
(25 ft) or less (for both lateral and vertical measurements), at least 95% of 
the time.[2] Actual performance measurements of the system at specific 
locations have shown it typically provides better than 1.0 metre (3 ft 3 in) 
laterally and 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in) vertically throughout most of the 
contiguous United States and large parts of Canada and Alaska.[3] With these 
results, WAAS is capable of achieving the required Category I precision 
approach accuracy of 16 metres (52 ft) laterally and 4.0 metres (13.1 ft) 
vertically.                                   [end of partial quote]

WAAS might be described as a form of differential GPS.   If the location as 
computed by the smartphone was improved by WAAS, the statement above indicates 
an accuracy within about 1 meter.  
IR-specific retroreflectors to greatly simplify things.
The article describes complicated systems using Bluetooth or WiFi to help 
locate these dead-drops.  While they are certainly innovative, they add cost 
and complexity to the hardware involved.   I have thought of a much-cheaper 
system that I feel is sufficiently secure and simple for common use.  
Light-retroreflectors are commonly made from Scotchlite  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retroreflective_sheeting     or plastic molded 
corner-cubes.       If a rather small (say, 1/4 in diameter) sphere covered 
with retroreflector material was held up from the insert, possibly by a short, 
thin stiff wire,  the sphere could be visible, but not excessively obvious even 
during the daylight.    It would be easy to find this device with a flashlight 
in the dark.  For added security, an infrared-transmitting plastic (such as is 
often used to cover IR-activating remote controls, such as      
https://www.eplastics.com/plexiglass/acrylic-sheets/ir-transmitting     )   
could be used to ensure that only IR is retroreflected back to a searcher.  
Ordinary smart-phone camera arrays are not only sensitive to human-visible 
light (generally described as 400-700 nanometer wavelength), but are also 
sensitive to near-IR wavelengths.  If a smartphone camera was combined with a 
directional IR LED, substituting for the white light LED lamp used for 
photography, and aiming in the same direction, a user would be able to see 
(through the camera display)  the IR-specific reflections from an IR-limited 
retroreflector, and this would probably be doable both during the day and at 
night.   A person operating such a camera would "look like" he was doing 
photography, or perhaps playing a game.   Somebody watching, even at night, 
could not see the IR.  The IR 'searchlight' could be a narrow-beam device, 
perhaps with a full-angle of 16 degrees or so (typical for a narrow-beam IR 
LED), so it wouldn't be particularly obvious even if watched through an IR 
viewer.  (If the IR LED itself was shielded from direct view.)  

One advantage of this technique is that the searcher could identify the target 
from a very long distance away, perhaps many tens of meters, and thus approach 
it in a more "innocent" fashion.   No obvious "searching" would have to be 
performed in the open.  And, the person who placed the dead drop could 
ascertain its status without later needing to approach it closely.  
This technique could be combined with Bluetooth or WiFi techniques, too.  The 
retroreflector could normally be retracted, and only raised if the proper 
Bluetooth or WiFi signal was heard.    Or, perhaps, the target would contain an 
exposed  IR LED, which would activate from an battery only if the proper 
signals were heard.    The resulting dead-drop would be virtually impossible to 
find.  
                            Jim Bell
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