Zuwei Xu was accused by the United States of invading university servers from February 2020 to June 2021, stealing vaccine data.


His explanation was: his phone was lost, and his email was hacked.
It's that simple.
A tech person, faced with intrusion logs accurate to the second and download records in security reports, says he lost his phone.
As if losing his phone means all operations from a specific IP and account during those two years have nothing to do with him.
See, this is the most typical case of “being too clever by half.”
He thought he was a tech expert, able to account for every link in the chain.
He thought “lost phone” was an uncheckable, foolproof excuse.
But he overlooked one thing—the digital world keeps backups of every action.
Server logs don’t lie, don’t forget, and don’t automatically disappear just because you say “lost phone.”
He thought he was the rule-maker, but in reality, he never even touched the edge of the rules.
You think you can go online without leaving traces, you think changing your alias means no one will know who you are.
But the real traces are in the underlying data you think no one will check.
They lie quietly there, waiting for the day they’ll pull you out.
Every click, every download, leaves a name on the server that you can’t erase.
Don’t think you can use some clever trick to wipe it out.
The most honest and safest way to live is—only do what you can accept the whole world knowing about. $ETH
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