Metaverse version of the Dark Web could be nearly impenetrable
RSA CONFERENCE 2023 – San Francisco – As the metaverse takes shape over the coming years, many of the security issues afflicting cyberspace will begin to spill over into virtual space as well.
One of the biggest of these threats will be the emergence of a new “darkverse,” where criminals will be able to operate with greater impunity and more dangerously than they are able to do now on the Dark Web, two researchers from Trend Micro said at an RSA Conference 2023 session in San Francisco, April 26.
The metaverse is a somewhat loosely used term to describe a virtual space where people can interact with other individuals and organizations in a computer-generated version of the physical world. Just like how massive multiplayer online games allow individuals to create digital avatars of themselves and interact with other gamers in fantasy worlds, a full-fledged metaverse will allow individuals to shop, work, socialize and do other activities in a virtual replica of the physical world.
The same phenomenon will happen in the cybercrime underground, the researchers warned. Just like the Dark Web exists on an unindexed deep Web, the darkverse will operate within an unindexed “deepverse” that law enforcement will find hard to penetrate, they noted: The space will offer a safe haven for criminal spaces, extremist spaces, purveyors of child pornography, and those seeking to harass others.
Numaan Huq and Philippe Lin, senior threat researchers at Trend Micro, were two authors of a report last year on how security and privacy threats will likely emerge and evolve in the metaverse as more people begin to use it. Among the threats they identified in the report were amplified versions of some existing issues such as social engineering, financial fraud, and privacy risks, and some new ones such as risks related to NFTs, cyber-physical threats, and more.
A Nearly Impenetrable ‘Darkverse’
The threats are a distance away from materializing, Huq and Linn said in a conversation with Dark Reading before their talk. “But the bad guys are already talking about how to make a profit in the metaverse,” cautions Lin. “If [organizations] just ignore the threat and don’t invest in trying to address them soon, they could lose more in future,” he notes.
Trend Micro itself describes the metaverse as a “cloud distributed, multi-vendor, immersive, interactive operating environment that users can access through different categories of connected device.” The metaverse will leverage Web 2.0 and Web 3.0 technologies to provide an interactive layer on top of the current Internet. “As proposed, it’s an open platform for working and playing inside an extended reality environment, and it will also be a communications layer for smart city devices,” according to Trend Micro.
The darkverse is a space that will exist within this world that, like today’s Dark Web, will offer a safe space for free speech and expression against oppressive entities and governments. It will equally be a place for illegal and criminal activities with marketplaces that cater to a wide criminal audience.
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