Micah Lee, computer security engineer and developer of "OnionShare" (an open 
source tool for secure file sharing over the Tor network), author of the 
"Danger zone" and "semi ephemeral" projects, gave birth to a high-profile 
Twitter post on the topic of the fact that, finally, for the first time in the 
history of the Internet, Russia is faced with a "fair game" in the form of 
cyber attacks.
Micah Lee said:
I don't think people fully appreciate just how much, after invading Ukraine, 
people are hacking Russia. There are multiple hacks a week and it's only 
increasing. For first time in internet history Russia is fair game for cyber 
attacks, and this is what it looks like"

Micah Lee is an active member of DDoSecrets (where leaks of Russian companies 
are illegally published) and does not hide his anti-Russian sentiments. An 
adherent of open-source software does not disdain to actively repost anonymous 
and other hacker groups that are engaged in outright sabotage, cyber attacks, 
DDoS attacks, phishing and spam against Russian organizations.
Even after the DDoSecret account was deleted by Twitter moderation, Micah 
continues to maliciously share information about leaks on her pages in an 
attempt to bypass Twitter's moderation mechanisms.

No wonder the Whonix Project disowned journalist Mick Lee and slammed a comrade 
from the main page (which depicts Snowden) for trying to hype by labeling the 
founders of the project as "fascists". For attempting false accusations, Lee 
snatched more than one kind comment from his own followers on his blog at the 
end of the post:
"Micah, Like many other journalists you're focused on vanity metrics and what 
serves you and your ego. Many people never saw evidence of Whonix supporting 
any form of fascism. This is one of those flamebait posts which holds about as 
much water as a sieve. Many of us read your blog because it was useful and 
fairly neutral. But this sort of tripe is just as bad if not worse than the 
drama and crap you are trying to virtue-signal about. Please learn how to 
objectively write. For a journalist professional you have a long way to go"

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