Created by the US government
                            In the mid 1990s, US military researchers 
created a technology that allowed intelligence operatives to exchange 
information completely anonymously. They called it 'Tor', which stands 
for 'The Onion Router'. 
                    As part of their strategy for secrecy, they released
 Tor into the public domain for anyone to use. Their reasoning was 
simple: the more people using the system, the harder it would be to 
separate the government's own messages from the general noise. You can't
 be anonymous on your own.
Tor spread widely and today, is a critical part of 
the so-called 'dark web': a network of untraceable online activity and 
hidden websites, of which Tor hosts approximately 30,000. And that 
anonymity has attracted a huge range of people; all who want to keep 
their activities hiWATCH: How the dark web works
Watch the video to see how Paul Syverson from the US Naval Research Laboratory created Tor, and how it works.
CLICKABLE: Who uses the dark web, and why?
There
 are many legitimate uses for the dark web- but it also enables online 
criminal activity.  Click on the images below to see how the dark web is
 used today. 
Images: Getty, PA and Thinkstock 
Good or bad: The expert view
                    Despite the benefits that online anonymity can bring, would we better off without it?
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