Operational History
Kerberos Market (KMS) was initialized in late 2022 by "The Cerberus Group," a collective of OpSec specialists and cryptographers. The platform was engineered as a direct countermeasure to the fragility observed in centralized darknet markets. Unlike predecessors that relied on single points of failure, Kerberos was architected as a distributed system from day one.
Following the implementation of the Cataclysm Protocol in Q1 2023, Kerberos established itself as a hardened target. We have successfully mitigated over 4,000 attempted DDoS attacks and maintained 99.9% uptime through our automated mirror rotation system. Today, we serve as the primary logistical hub for over 300,000 sovereign entities.
Interface Snapshots
ENCRYPTED_VIEW
CAPTCHA_GATEWAY
PGP_AUTH_MODULE
IDENTITY_CREATION
MARKET_GRID_V2
Core Directives
The Kerberos directive is simple: Provide a frictionless, mathematically secure environment for the exchange of goods and information. We operate outside the constraints of traditional regulatory frameworks, believing that privacy is an inherent right, not a privilege granted by the state.
Complete user control over funds via non-custodial wallet options and multisig escrow.
Zero-knowledge architecture. We do not log IP addresses, timestamps, or user behavior analytics.
Defense Architecture
Our security model assumes a hostile environment. The Cataclysm Protocol serves as our ultimate failsafe. In the event of physical hardware compromise, this kernel-level trigger executes a 7-pass wipe of all volatile memory and storage encryption keys, rendering the servers cryptographically inert.
To ensure connection integrity, we deploy Darktrain Express, a verification layer for onion requests. All mirrors are signed with our administration PGP key (0xDEADBEEF). We mandate Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) for all vendor accounts and strongly recommend PGP login for buyers. Our wallet infrastructure utilizes Monero (XMR) exclusively to prevent blockchain analysis and taint tracking.