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That one is harder. So it’s a trade off.
I can do harder. What I can’t do is watch a plan fall through and a bunch of hard work and results crumble down around it.
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That one is harder. So it’s a trade off.
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If they notice it. And at that point, it might just be too late.
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I see two routes. We could either pose as a good source and see if they really do their due diligence, or we could hack them and publish an article ourselves.
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Picture this: We publish one “breaking news! Exposé on the origins of the mutant viruses!” in one trusted news journal, and before you know it, everyone is going to be publishing it.
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They may be just as confused as us. We could plant a fake news story.
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*Shrugs*
Given that it’s not locked up, probably not. But I’m not going to assume anything.
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We can’t say that someone broke in and used her PC, since that raises too many questions. The lab itself probably won’t play ball with us either.
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What do we tell her, then?
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Maybe we can tell her the viruses mutated and escaped on their own?
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*Pulls up online articles covering the cleanup and recovery efforts*
I’m getting the feeling we can’t pull off a media blackout.