According to reports, this story begins at an entirely unscientific moment: Zhou Ziye, a designer who rose from creating counterfeit mobile phones, suddenly time-traveled back to the year 1984.
...Let's mark the poster who made the post.
Xing Baohua logged out of the backend and directly logged into the HK forum homepage. After finding the original poster, he showed it to Comrade Lü.
Just three sentences, which I quickly copied down.
Xing Baohua glanced at the poster's ID nickname: Old Bookworm Only Has Stubbornness Left.
Considering Hou Qian's book as a codebook, this person does seem to be quite well-read, but she's also stubborn. Could it be that she'd rather die than tell?
Always remind your underlings that if they are exposed and arrested, the only way to survive is to be stubborn.
This "job" probably doesn't refer to the person who was arrested, but perhaps their entire family?
In a sense, all this bookworm has left is his stubbornness; judging from his name, he's a formidable character.
The first sentence of that quote: Jane Eyre is full of vibrant personality, which is intoxicating.
The second question: Is Schindler's List really just a list?
In the third round: The Silence of the Lambs will not erupt from silence.
Xing Baohua used a small program to create an image of the entire page and saved it. The principle is similar to taking a screenshot.
Then connect the printer and print out the pages. Looking at the paper and reading three sentences should be equivalent to reading three books.
I haven't read the first one, and I haven't read the books for the second and third ones, but I have seen the movies!
The last one, in particular, was a horror movie. I've probably forgotten the plot.
As for whether "Schindler's List" can be understood as having many names, and whether it involves contacting people who need them, or turning them to defect, or...
Why not erupt in silence? What's the intention behind this? Is it to incite or stir up trouble?
They've stirred up those who were silent; they're up to no good!
Looking at the posting time, it was around 3 PM yesterday.
Xing Baohua handed the paper to Comrade Lü, exited the forum page, and went into the backend to search for the original poster.
I just wanted to see the other person's IP address, but I was clearly overthinking it. They used hiding methods, and the server didn't leave any record. It's not that no trace was left, but rather that a virtual address was left.
The other party is probably a small team that uses botnets to log into forum websites and then hides their IP addresses using certain techniques to post.
With current technology, we can't pinpoint the other party's location. But that's okay, there are still ways. We just need to camp near the server and wait for them to post again. Then, we can create a decoy virus to at least find their first botnet.
Okay, here comes another job!