I Can Meet with Dead Scientists-Chapter 337 - 195 Unexpected Direction_2

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The National Science University was the first to respond.

After statements were released by the two universities.

Some students at the National Science University, who had initially blamed the school server's Ubisoft-like speed, finally understood the situation:

So we got house robbed?

With this mentality, those students who hadn't gone to bed yet started voluntarily spreading the buzz on the topic.

At the same time.

Editors on duty at some other blue-check media also noticed the trending topic and began to share it one after another.

At 4:37 AM.

Sichuan Province Observation became the first official media to share the news.

Next came reports from Financial Metropolitan Daily, Capital City WJ, and numerous university official accounts.

By 4:55 AM.

Tuantuan and People's Day showed up one after another to show support.

The topic '#USTC National Science University Statement' shot up to the seventh spot on trending searches.

You have to know.

There were still over two hours before the real peak user time; topics ranking high on trending were primarily supported by the weight added before and after midnight.

When the peak reading time arrives in the morning, the buzz is destined to grow even higher.

Sure enough.

By 5:50 AM, the topic surged into the top three of trending searches.

By then, Xu Yun had just dreamed of Tifa.

Fifteen minutes later.

A blogger named 'Sweet Potato Ability Old Six' suddenly updated their Weibo:

[Here's some gossip: several universities in Neon were also attacked [image][image], but they haven't disclosed the attacker's IP. Instead, the homepage displays the Korean language, intriguing...]

As a well-known internet blogger, 'Sweet Potato Ability Old Six' has many followers who are all quite active.

Thus, shortly after the blog post, the number of comments surpassed a hundred.

One of the top-liked comments said:

[Lady Bayun with 1.8-meter-long legs: Trying to be like Wang Yun, Lu Bu and Dong Zhuo are fighting [dog head]]

The comment received 723 likes, with lots of laughing emojis below it.

Clearly.

You can't hide this sort of thing from smart people.

The second most liked user ID was 'Checking Updates Too Early to See Book Friend's Sassy Talk', providing a screenshot:

"Exchange student studying in Korea passing by, here's a screenshot from Korean forums with all the praise for Korean hackers. These people are really cool with taking blame for anything..."

The replies below it also contained a bunch of "hahaha."

Actually, this is quite normal.

Previously, the largest refined oil pipeline operator, Colonial, across the sea, was hacked, with a Tai Chi symbol left on one of the subpages. Domestically, many people shouted it was us...

Back then, screenshots of these remarks were captured by some foreign media, causing some trouble for foreign liaison work.

This kind of sentiment could be likened to a large forest where all sorts of birds exist, which might sound a bit AOEsque, but sometimes it is indeed easily provoked and exploited.

And then another hour passed.

An industry insider from the cybersecurity field spoke out:

[I just chatted with some old friends in cyber security, we don't know or comment on what's happening in Neon over there, but the domestic incident with the two universities is quite interesting. The spark of this cyber defense battle, you might not believe, was those adorable cockroaches.]

Within the Weibo post.

This blogger started from cockroach extermination and explained the entire cause and effect of the incident in detail:

[... In short, that's roughly the situation. Over in Neon, some universities collaborated with certain manufacturers to target Huadun Biotech, but instead, they suffered losses and were taught a lesson by our justice-minded Korean friends who opposed this behavior, tears in eyes.]

The reason for the National Science University's hack isn't exactly a secret; such a significant event naturally needs to be documented and reported.

After all, the number of users or students involved is just too many. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎

So it's not really a secret to insiders.

This was the earliest Weibo that mentioned the cause of the incident, and it quickly stood out from the mass of data streams, becoming the top-ranked blog post on the details page.

Thus...

'An Attack of One Cockroach'.

This product, which previously sparked a pest control live stream at Ke Da, once again gained more popularity than during its initial campaign.

Moreover, this buzz also contained a very special national sentiment.

Though this sentiment cannot compare to that of Hongxing Erke, Anta, or Bai Xiang at the time, the population base of Huaxia is really just too large.

When this sentiment manifested, the power it exploded with reached an astonishing magnitude—at least for a new company.

As a result.

While Xu Yun was teaching Tifa about the tunnel effect and superposition principle in his dream.

The sales backend.

The product sales model, initially climbing steadily under Gu Qunqing's design, suddenly showed a slight change.

Then.....

Shoot up to the sky.

.......

Clearly.

You can't hide this sort of thing from smart people.

The second most liked user ID was 'Checking Updates Too Early to See Book Friend's Sassy Talk', providing a screenshot:

"Exchange student studying in Korea passing by, here's a screenshot from Korean forums with all the praise for Korean hackers. These people are really cool with taking blame for anything..."

The replies below it also contained a bunch of "hahaha."

Actually, this is quite normal.

Previously, the largest refined oil pipeline operator, Colonial, across the sea, was hacked, with a Tai Chi symbol left on one of the subpages. Domestically, many people shouted it was us...

Back then, screenshots of these remarks were captured by some foreign media, causing some trouble for foreign liaison work.

This kind of sentiment could be likened to a large forest where all sorts of birds exist, which might sound a bit AOEsque, but sometimes it is indeed easily provoked and exploited.

And then another hour passed.

An industry insider from the cybersecurity field spoke out:

[I just chatted with some old friends in cyber security, we don't know or comment on what's happening in Neon over there, but the domestic incident with the two universities is quite interesting. The spark of this cyber defense battle, you might not believe, was those adorable cockroaches.]

Within the Weibo post.

This blogger started from cockroach extermination and explained the entire cause and effect of the incident in detail:

[... In short, that's roughly the situation. Over in Neon, some universities collaborated with certain manufacturers to target Huadun Biotech, but instead, they suffered losses and were taught a lesson by our justice-minded Korean friends who opposed this behavior, tears in eyes.]

The reason for the National Science University's hack isn't exactly a secret; such a significant event naturally needs to be documented and reported.

After all, the number of users or students involved is just too many.

So it's not really a secret to insiders.