Frequently Asked Questions (2026)

This Kerberos FAQ compiles the most requested answers about the Kerberos darknet market, its onion infrastructure, security layer, PGP verification, and privacy policies. All data is simplified for research purposes.

Quick Index

  1. Is Kerberos a real darknet market?
  2. How to access securely?
  3. Where are verified mirrors?
  4. What is Kerberos PGP key?
  5. How privacy is protected?
  6. Why Monero?
  7. If mirror is down?
  8. Mirror rotation?
  9. VPN usage?
  10. Purpose of Kerberos Docs?
  11. Report phishing?
  12. JavaScript needed?
  13. Last verification?

1 – Is Kerberos a real darknet market?

Kerberos is an authenticated onion‑only marketplace focused on privacy and PGP‑based security. This documentation hub does not host listings, it publishes educational and verification data for research and safe access purposes.

2 – How to access Kerberos securely?

Install Tor Browser, open a verified mirror from the Official Mirrors page, and confirm the PGP fingerprint matches the Kerberos Master Key.

3 – Where to find verified onion mirrors?

All official mirrors are listed on Kerberos Docs › Links. They’re signed and audited monthly for integrity.

4 – What is a Kerberos PGP key?

A PGP key allows users and servers to exchange verified and encrypted messages without revealing metadata.

5 – How is user privacy protected?

Through XMR transactions, onion‑layer encryption, and session isolation under Kerberos Docs policy.

6 – Why does Kerberos use Monero?

Its privacy‑by‑default model supports confidential transactions via ring signatures and Stealth Addresses.

7 – What if a mirror is offline?

Verify via PGP announcement and switch to another link published on Kerberos Docs immediately.

8 – How often are mirrors rotated?

Usually every few weeks to prevent traffic analysis and maintain distributed availability.

9 – Can Tor + VPN be used together?

Yes, it adds a layer of encryption but slightly slows down connections; Kerberos Docs supports this practice.

10 – What is Kerberos Docs?

An independent hub maintained for verifying Kerberos market links and providing security education for darknet researchers.

11 – How to report fake mirrors?

Send a PGP‑encrypted report to the Kerberos Docs team using Master Key 6F3A F9D1 B78E 3222 44C3 D1A7 9C6E 112F 9C7C 442B.

12 – Is JavaScript required?

No, all kerberos‑onion interfaces work with scripts disabled; it improves privacy and reduces attack surface.

13 – When was verification last done?

All Kerberos mirrors and PGP fingerprints were audited and signed in January 2026; see Links page for proof hashes.