Freedom Hosting was a
Tor specialist
web hosting service that was established in 2008. At its height in August 2013, it was the largest Tor web host.[2]
News reports linked a
Firefox browser vulnerability to a United States
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) operation targeting Freedom Hosting's owner, Eric Eoin Marques. In August 2013, it was discovered that the
Firefox browsers in many older versions of the Tor Browser Bundle were vulnerable to a
JavaScript attack, as
NoScript was not enabled by default.[5] This attack was being exploited to send users'
MAC and
IP addresses and Windows computer names to the attackers.[6][7][8][self-published source?] The FBI acknowledged they were responsible for the attack in a 12 September 2013 court filing in
Dublin;[9] further technical details from a training presentation leaked by
Edward Snowden showed that the codename for the exploit was
EgotisticalGiraffe.[10]
Founder and legal proceedings
The site was founded and administered by an American-Irish citizen, Eric Eoin Marques (born (1985-04-29)April 29, 1985), who was born in
New York City to an
Irish mother and a
Brazilian-born
Portuguese father who worked as a successful architect.[11][12] He had been referred to a psychiatrist as a young teenager with no specific diagnosis made.[13] He was described as timid and
anti-social, and had failed to complete school.[12] In 2005, Marques started a business named Host Ultra with his father before dissolving it in 2011.[12][11] His father had justified the large amounts of money Marques made by claiming he worked at a bank.[12]
Marques was arrested in Ireland on 1 August 2013, on a provisional extradition warrant issued by a United States court on the 29th of July that year.[14][15] The FBI sought to extradite Marques to Maryland on four charges — distributing, conspiring to distribute, and advertising
child pornography — as well as aiding and abetting advertising of child pornography. The warrant alleges that Marques was "the largest facilitator of child porn on the planet".[16][17] His attorneys fought for several years to prevent his extradition to the United States on the grounds that he had
Asperger's syndrome and would not receive the appropriate care in a US prison if extradited.[18][19] In December 2016, the Irish Court of Appeal ruled the extradition should proceed.[20] This was not the end of his appeal process, however, and his lawyers announced they would make a new appeal to the Supreme Court. This appeal was dismissed by the Irish Supreme Court on 20 March 2019.[21] Marques faced life in prison if tried and convicted in the United States.[22] On 6 February 2020, Marques pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to advertise child abuse images, as part of a plea agreement that would entail a prison term of 15 to 21 years.[23][24] On 6 September 2021, Marques was sentenced to 27 years imprisonment and ordered to forfeit over $154,000.[25][26]
After the closure of Freedom Hosting, a new service,
Freedom Hosting II, was created. In 2017, it ran 20 percent of all websites on the Tor network.[30] It was taken permanently offline later in 2017 during a coordinated hacking attack.[31][32]