4/23/2015

Drug-buying robot cleared of all charges

darknetshopper1.jpgThe returned installation.!Mediengruppe Bitnik
When does a robot want to buy ecstasy pills? When it's part of an art installation about the deep web, the portion of the internet not indexed by most search engines. Random Darknet Shopper by Switzerland-based art group !Mediengruppe Bitnik was recently displayed as an installation as part of exhibition The Darknet -- From Memes to Onionland at the Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen.

Like the name suggests, the robot's job was mystery shopper -- a true mystery shopper. It went on a weekly shopping spree, purchasing a variety of random, mystery items on the deep web with a budget of 100 bitcoins a week.
These purchases and the packaging they arrived in were displayed alongside Random Darknet Shopper at the museum. They included a pair of Nike trainers, a pair of bootleg Diesel jeans, 10 packets of Chesterfield cigarettes, a "The Lord of the Rings" ebook collection -- and 10 pills of illegal party drug MDMA, also known as ecstasy.
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The ecstasy and the packaging in which it arrived.!Mediengruppe Bitnik
Random Darknet Shopper was on display at the St Gallen, Switzerland-based museum from October 18, 2014. In January 2015, Swiss police seized the robot and all of its purchases.
According to a post on the !Mediengruppe Bitnik website, those items have now been returned to the artists -- except for the pills, which tested positive for MDMA and were subsequently destroyed. However, neither the robot nor its creators have been charged with criminal activity.
"We decided the Ecstasy that is in this presentation was safe and nobody could take it away. Bitnik never intended to sell it or consume it so we didn't punish them," St Gallen spokesman Thomas Hansjakob told CNBC.
!Mediengruppe Bitnik was overjoyed, noting that, along with the returned objects, the group also received the order for the withdrawal of prosecution. This stated that the possession of the ecstasy was a reasonable means of sparking public debate; and that the questions raised by the work justified the exhibition of the drugs.
"We as well as the Random Darknet Shopper have been cleared of all charges," the group wrote. "This is a great day for the bot, for us and for freedom of art!"
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