After nearly a century of searching, the nature of dark matter
continues to elude us.While Ockham's razor may at face value want a favor
a dark sector with one component, the complexity of the visible sector
urges us to consider dark sectors with multiple components, including
possibly dissipative interactions. In a galaxy like the Milky Way, these
interactions would lead to cooling of the dissipative sector, resulting in
a disk of dark matter with enhanced local density. I will briefly review
the current bounds on the local dark matter density and explain why they
do not apply to a dark disk. I will then explain what the latest
astrophysical data truly say about a dark disk, including the bounds we
recently determined from Milky Way stellar kinematics and from the
distribution of the local interstellar gas, and what we can expect in
upcoming the Gaia era.