In March 2020, the incident of Room N was made public in a news bulletin that the operator was detained, and the details of how Room N threatened to control women to make money for it and the details of its operation were exposed.
The number of victims of the incident was as high as 74, of which 16 were minors, the youngest being only 11 years old.
Recently, the documentary “Cyber Hell: Exposing an Internet Horror” was released, which restores the process of how to discover, how to expose, and the current situation of suspects and victims.
How can people who have never met, use and destroy people they have never met without leaving home?
The possibility of cybercrime is stealthy and harmful, simple and murderous far beyond imagination.
Judging from the information provided by the documentary, the way to trap the victim, just a message, a link with a virus can be guaranteed: lock the target woman from social software, claim to have seen her photo on a certain website, wait for the victim to have no clue Be prepared to click on the website and get a virus.
The subsequent remote control will easily capture the victim, allowing the victim to be threatened and manipulated in a state where they dare not speak out, and become a tool for making money.
Why are criminal suspects so easy to get?
Because in the big environment, the crowd not only has voyeuristic curiosity about women’s privacy, but also has the original uncivilized accusation power.
No matter what kind of exposure, when a person’s private images are leaked, they will become the target of attack and injury.
For this reason, she may lose her job, have no friends, be understood and comforted, and be tormented by collateral damage in the crowd, leading to her demise.
The documentary tells the difficult exposure process from the perspective of the reporter who first discovered the incident.
Among them, after the male reporter was the first to report, he was threatened by the operator of Room N, searched for his specific information, and also disclosed the recent activities of his family, and his life was greatly troubled.
The operator Baksa is very arrogant. Even if he learns that the incident is fermenting, he may be prosecuted for investigation. He dares to speak madly and talk to investigators; he even takes the initiative to expose his crimes that the police have not grasped.
It seems that you don’t need to be responsible for cybercrime, and you even think that your actions are not a crime.
And godgod is smarter than Baksa, with extremely high criminal methods and anti-reconnaissance methods, hiding deeper, and catching him more difficult.
Their crime has a whole set of procedures, phishing victims, making public charges in online groups, then laundering their illegal gains with virtual currencies such as Bitcoin, and finally hiding in life as ordinary people, enjoying the benefits of poisoning others. The wealth that comes brings life.
The first half of the documentary is presented in the narration. It is not clear whether it is an interpretation or a live recording. It is relatively bland and does not have the impact of a plot movie.
Until the scene of the arrest of suspects Baksa and godgod emerged, the documentary followed suit.
In the news event, the appearance of Baksa is not clear enough, and the news events are all reported one by one, so it is impossible to connect this person with the impact brought by Room N.
When the documentary presents the whole process in its entirety, and then the real news footage is suddenly added to look at the two stinky, fat-headed and big-eared criminal suspects, a sense of horror arises spontaneously.
They are demons who have turned into ordinary people, their cunning and arrogance are different, and their indifference and brutality are even more different. After their specific criminal behavior was revealed, the victims were finally found guilty.
As said in the film, bystanders are also accomplices, witnessing their criminal behavior not only did not refuse to speak out, but also paid to browse, turned their heads and spoke ill of women.
If all were aware of this, there would be no breeding ground for crimes like Baksa.
Related Post: Netflix Documentary “Cyber Hell: Exposing an Internet Horror” Releases Official Trailer.
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