Big Brother is Watching
IDF Admits: We Have Been Spying on Our Soldiers
The IDF will begin monitoring the social media activity of conscripted soldiers after Hamas succeeded in gathering sensitive information from online posts.

In an unprecedented announcement that echoes dystopian nightmares, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) are rolling out a chilling new era of digital oversight.
Published this morning on Galatz (IDF Radio)'s morning brief, the military giant is set to monitor every tweet, post, and pixel from its active-duty warriors, desperately racing to seal the leaks that fueled Hamas's deadly intelligence web before the horrors of October 7, the extent of which was just revealed to the public a few days ago.
For years, Hamas lurked in the shadows, feasting on careless selfies, geotagged brags, and unwitting revelations from IDF soldiers' online lives. Our explosive exposé earlier this week laid bare how these digital crumbs built a monstrous spy network that struck with devastating precision.
Now, the IDF strikes back with a vengeance, unveiling "Morpheus," a cutting-edge AI juggernaut. This all-seeing beast, powered by artificial intelligence, will relentlessly scour every text, photo, and video uploaded by soldiers. Trained like a digital predator, it hunts for forbidden secrets: hidden bases, covert positions, classified weapons, anything that could arm the enemy
Spot a breach? Boom! Instant alerts rocket to Information Security officers for a deep-dive takedown.
Cross the line, soldier? Prepare for the hammer: An automated warning blasts your device, demanding you scrub that post, or face a direct call from the watchdogs themselves.
The system hurtles toward full activation in early December, armed with final legal nods. But hold on, two ironclad limits: It preys only on the 170,000 public, wide-open accounts, sparing the shadows of private profiles. And reservists? Off-limits, tangled in a web of civilian legal snarls.
Here's the jaw-dropper: For the last four months, a stealthy pilot has been prowling, shadowing 45,000 troops and unearthing thousands of red flags.
Military insiders confess: The Information Security Directorate has already swooped in, forcing deletions and slamming shut those perilous digital doors.
In fact, after Hezbollah launched a drone attack on an IDF training base in northern Israel on October 13, 2024, killing four soldiers and wounding over 60 others, footage of the base circulated. The footage was hosted on the official Mitgaysim (IDF recruitment) website, and was freely available to anyone. It provided intimate details of the Golani training base, such as the layout, clinic, sports field, and dining hall (the site of the drone strike).
The IDF admits, this draconian dragnet teeters on the brink of privacy apocalypse, shredding norms of restraint in the name of survival.
It's not the dark ages anymore, it's 2025 and social media has been weaponized, just like Glocks and bombs.
In the wake of October 7's betrayal, the IDF is done playing games.