@article{Tzanetakis_Décary-Hétu_Bakken_Munksgaard_Katzenbach_Demant_Paquet-Clouston_Weissinger_2018, title={DRUG MARKETS AND ANONYMIZING TECHNOLOGIES}, volume={2018}, url={https://spir.aoir.org/ojs/index.php/spir/article/view/10463}, DOI={10.5210/spir.v2018i0.10463}, abstractNote={Online drug markets taking advantage of social media and encryption software (e.g. Tor network) and cryptocurrencies (e.g. Bitcoin, Monero) to conceal the identity and physical location of their users are a relatively new area of internet research. Yet, a range of socio-technical innovations have contributed to the proliferation of drug markets on the Internet. Due to the illegality of drugs and drug dealing are anonymizing technologies regarded as important socio-technical practices among its participants allowing to mitigate risks of vendors and customers when exchanging drugs. This panel draws together a number of leading scholars in this emerging area of research to explore questions and issues associated with online platforms enabling illicit transactions. The collection of papers in this panel contribute empirical data and theoretical insight on a range of relevant topics in the study of online drug markets, including methodological challenges, social embeddedness, trust production and governance on cryptomarkets. Various papers in this panel propose new concepts for understanding cryptomarkets as social phenomena where relationships enable economic transactions. It also pluralizes trust building on online platforms and, expanding it from merely institution-based mechanisms to include social relations such as interpreting signs and signals or previous interactions between buyers and sellers. They also expand on reliability of data gathered via anonymous online interviews, drawing attention to participation of marginalized communities. The aim of this panel is to bring together new research to further our understanding of the overall impact of online platform emergence upon global drug markets and to better model their impact on drug dealing, online networks and society in general.}, journal={AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research}, author={Tzanetakis, Meropi and Décary-Hétu, David and Bakken, Silje and Munksgaard, Rasmus and Katzenbach, Christian and Demant, Jakob and Paquet-Clouston, Masarah and Weissinger, Laurin}, year={2018}, month={Oct.} }