Although Géb did not win the essay competition, his thesis on the model of an environmentally conscious life born out of the cooperation of grassroots groups without a state , which embraced the idea of anarchism, made an impact. Mr Arkon's essay had driven him to the brink of a nervous breakdown in the jury. Géb had buried himself for life with Mr Arkon, but the point of view of the essay, the solution it offered for a more viable and efficient social model, caught the attention of an insider media professional. He then received several offers almost immediately to work as a journalist in the online and print press.
This was the beginning of Géb's online journalism career, and a year later, as a first-year student, she started a blog called The Other Face of Truth.
Géb interviewed people, both face-to-face and online, who believed in the outstanding legacy of the past, in the afterlife, and to whom strange things had happened. On one occasion, he found a group of people who were in direct contact with the spirit world, but he also interviewed a crop circle researcher. He met an alien abductee, a psychic, a clairvoyant healer who saw auras, a South American shaman and a researcher who carried on Tesla's legacy, and a historian, But his subjects included a theoretical physicist who spoke about the relationship between quantum physics and the Vedas, and a representative of a secret religious organisation who researched the power of ancient symbols. He spoke to a well-known macroeconomic analyst, who asked not to be named, who shared his research and views on the harmfulness of competition.
Most of them, of course, did not openly admit their views. There were some whose identities remained unclear, but because they came to us in several stages, through recommendations and because they shed an interesting light on the research area they were looking at, they were interviewed. Géb published his writings in Hungarian and English on his increasingly popular online forum, under the nickname Dharma. His name is borrowed from the Sanskrit word Dharma, which translates as the law of existence, the law of truth.
that's how he got in touch with Igor's ideals, and after years of unsuccessfully trying to get an interview with Igor, out of nowhere Igor himself came to Géb at the suggestion of a guy called MadDex to talk to Géb.
MadDex was a real big gun. He was the biggest star of Géb's interviewees so far. Géb interviewed her about a month ago, at the end of May 2015. 't really an interview, it was more of Géb's wicker wig, searching for the truth and spreading the truth she found
MadDex was a 22 year old American guy and the lead programmer at one of the world's most famous virtual 3D game companies. Shortly before the interview, he was fired from his company after being accused of stealing software for the CIA.
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In the interview, Mad claimed that he had to perform certain tasks in a real-life technology of such incredible quality that he could not imagine who developed it and how. Driven by professional curiosity, he demanded answers. He declared that if he did not get an explanation, he would expose himself, because this was not just a game programme, but presumably a secret conspiracy. In response, he was accused of fabricated software theft and threatened to keep quiet or else the FBI would come knocking on his door. Just in case, they added quietly.
Géb wondered why it hadn't been revealed yet who MadDex had come to him through, and why he had chosen him, a small, insignificant and anonymous scribbler in a remote country in a small part of the world. Was it because MadDex's company QPM created the online role-playing game World of Darkness? Could MadDex have known who was behind the roles in the game? This is impossible. It's scary even to think about. Like an Orwellian story where Big Brother is watching and knows exactly who is behind an IP address and an email address in real life. The thought gave him goosebumps and he preferred to chalk it up to coincidence until a more reasonable explanation could be offered. For Géb also had a time-consuming hobby that he was reluctant to talk about. He was ashamed to say that he had become so engrossed in a role-playing game played by one of the interviewees that, after trying it out, he was stuck there too, immersing himself in another world once or twice a week, night after night. That's how Géb became the Priest of Darkness in the MMRPG (Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game). Géb had been playing the game for six months and held the title of King of Darkness, one of the four High Priests under the Supreme Power. In the game, he represented the counterpoint to the darkness and played the role-playing game as an inside spy without the knowledge of any of the thousands of players in the game.
The clock read 23:50. As he looked at the clock and tried to piece together the events, MadDex and Igor's relationship, he wondered what a hacker had to do with an engineer from a game software developer and why both of them were being accused of such serious crimes
For a month ago, there were also rumours about Igor that most people take at face value, especially when they appear in the pages of a prestigious newspaper. The US daily New World Order ran an editorial saying "Russian hacker stole credit card numbers."
- What barefaced lies. Igor of all people would do such a thing when he is fanatically committed to the search for truth
Igor was rumoured to be an anarchist, a peace activist, by those who superficially browsed the news. He is a faceless Russian hacker whose views can be found in many places on the Internet, and is wanted by Interpol for stealing secret data from several banks. But after years of research, Géb found Igor to be an extremely sharp-witted, intelligent peace fighter, driven by a straight and honest heart - if that is the word to describe a peace activist who is determined to do everything, "to pull the veil off illusion", as Igor described his own activities.