The invisible "killer"

Milton 2021-12-24 08:01:49

If you are not bound by the law, you can kill with the click of a mouse, would you be one of them?

A single click may be just a click of the mouse for individuals, but gathering little makes more, gathering sand into a tower. When the number of clicks increases, should we reflect on ourselves. In the network, we also have temperature.

Every crime generally has a reason behind it, and every killing is assisted by netizens.

Human indifference and selfishness are the source of all evil. The subject matter is quite novel, KILL WITH ME kills people on the Internet, and has a very good intention!

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Extended Reading
  • Geraldine 2022-04-22 07:01:39

    The point is the device! If there is a killer who likes to play with devices, then you must give him a like. It seems that everything serves the theme, but in fact everything serves the device. The topic of online mob is a bit rotten

  • Reagan 2022-03-25 09:01:11

    How can such a great subject matter be so weak, the rhythm is too weak, but the method of killing has opened my eyes

Untraceable quotes

  • Agent Jennifer Marsh: This is James Reilly. Sixteen months ago, depressed over the recent death of his wife... a hematologist... Reilly staggered out into rush-hour traffic on the Broadway Bridge. Traffic copters were out in force. But only one caught all the action from beginning to end... Channel 12. The regular pilot was out sick that day, so the job went to Herbert Miller. He later told friends he'd gotten lucky. At the right place at the right time. The back of Reilly's skull... landed on the rooftop of this diner. So did his glasses. The skull was turned over to the coroner... but the glasses were retrieved by one of the diner's employees, Scotty Hillman. He put them up for sale online. And they sold quickly. Kids were home from school. Parents were outraged. They called the TV stations. The TV stations apologized... except for Channel 12. They'd been having a little problem in the ratings, but not that afternoon. Their numbers were sky-high. And knowing a good thing when it fell into their lap, they rushed a veteran reporter to the scene. This is David Williams. He got lucky, landed an interview with a local businessman... whose parked Cadillac had been struck by Reilly's falling body. When the interview ended, Channel 12, as a courtesy to those who might have missed it, aired the entire video one last time. Within minutes, Andrew Kilburn had pulled it off his TiVo... and posted it on five different shock-video sites. From there, Reilly's suicide was public domain... something for five billion people to feed on, laugh at, gossip about. Reilly had a son, Owen. He was brilliant. Good at electronics, mechanics and computers... but he was disturbed. He was troubled. He was withdrawn. Owen took his father's suicide very hard. He had to be hospitalized. And six months ago, he was released. This x-ray image is supposed to be Owen's father. The number on the left, the date his father died... followed by the the number of his autopsy report. Owen lives alone now at his father's house in Fairview. What do you say we arrest the piece of shit?

  • Detective Eric Box: Hi, I'm Detective Box.

    Arthur James Elmer: Unusual name...

    Detective Eric Box: Well, it wasn't up to me.