As the sun began to rise over the Yamuna River, Vikram hit the 'Enter' key. The data dump began—sensitive defense files began streaming into his encrypted vault. In the world of modern warfare, the most powerful weapons weren't missiles or tanks; they were lines of code and the shadows that wrote them.
Their mission was simple but high-stakes: gather intelligence on defense organizations and government agencies across Asia and Europe to serve India's national interests. For months, Vikram had been meticulously crafting a "spear-phishing" campaign, posing as a high-ranking diplomat from a neighboring country. indian hacker group
The air in the cramped South Delhi apartment was thick with the hum of overclocked servers and the smell of stale coffee. Vikram, known in the digital underground as 'Yama', stared at the scrolling lines of code on his triple-monitor setup. He wasn't just any hacker; he was a key operative for , the group better known to international intelligence as "Bitter" . As the sun began to rise over the