By the Numbers: The Deep Web
Trend Micro's latest research into the Deep Web has revealed a number of interesting facts about the Internet's hidden side, offering a closer look at how cybercriminals take advantage of the Deep Web to launch cybercrime operations. It's not all about cybercrime though. A lot of "contemporary" criminal operations have taken advantage of the anonymity that the Deep Web offers by setting up shop to trade illegal goods and services.
Despite having gone through a number of high-profile arrests and takedowns, the Deep Web economy is thriving, with marketplaces that peddle stolen or hacked accounts, drugs and weapons, fake passports, and even assassination contracts. Here are some of the most interesting numbers gathered.
[Read about Trend Micro's latest dive into the Deep Web in Below the Surface: Exploring the Deep Web]
Like it? Add this infographic to your site:
1. Click on the box below. 2. Press Ctrl+A to select all. 3. Press Ctrl+C to copy. 4. Paste the code into your page (Ctrl+V).
Image will appear the same size as you see above.
HttpContext.GetGlobalResourceObject("ES","RecentPosts")%>
- The Devil Reviews Xanthorox: A Criminal-Focused Analysis of the Latest Malicious LLM Offering
- AI Security Starts Here: The Essentials for Every Organization
- Agentic Edge AI: Development Tools and Workflows
- Ransomware Spotlight: DragonForce
- When Tokenizers Drift: Hidden Costs and Security Risks in LLM Deployments

Complexity and Visibility Gaps in Power Automate
AI Security Starts Here: The Essentials for Every Organization
Stay Ahead of AI Threats: Secure LLM Applications With Trend Vision One