HypNovember 2023 Writings
Day 16: Hacking/Hijacking
by moosezilla
Tags:
#cw:noncon
#clothing
#CW:dubious_consent
#memory_play
#microfiction
#chastity
#D/s
#exhibitionism
#halloween
#humiliation
#hypnotic_amnesia
#orgasm_denial
#pov:bottom
#pov:top
#teasing
cw: noncon; gaslighting; amnesia; corporate espionage
“AUGH!!!” The hacker grabbed his hair with his fists, focusing his frustration on his hair follicles to resist the urge to throw his laptop against the wall.
He had taken on this job several weeks ago; some big tech company wanted to hack another for their secrets, the usual. It paid far more than the usual job of this type, because apparently he was the 14th person to take it on. Everyone before him had failed to get the required information.
At first, he’d thought they had all just been fools. He had done hundreds of these kinds of jobs before.
But now, 5 weeks later… well, he wasn’t quite ready to admit defeat. Not yet.
Still, even for a tech company, it seemed almost like there was someone monitoring him keystroke for keystroke. Like, top-secret government-level shit.
He could get in, alright. He’d gotten in several times. But he’d blink and his way in would be patched. Like they were toying with him.
Even at the higher pay, he had still spent far longer on this job than it was worth. But something about this job was driving him to distraction, to obsession. He needed to outsmart these guys. It was a matter of pride now. It almost felt personal, somehow.
The hacker took a few deep breaths, got up, grabbed a beer, sat back down, and got back to work.
~~~
That Monday morning, the Human Behaviour Specialist walked into the Digital Security Office, contentedly sipping her morning coffee and placing a second one on the Head of Digital Security’s desk.
“How’d we do this weekend?”
“Brandon is persistent. He got in 6 times over the weekend. He’s quite talented. Nobody else seems to have tried, at least not hard enough to get anywhere.”
The entire department thought she was out of her mind when she suggested hiring a human behaviour specialist. Even more so when they found out that the new hire was a hypnotist by trade. But nobody could argue with the results.
Between the hypnotist and the Digital Security Office staff, they had implemented a security system that, so far, had been unbeatable. As soon as someone tried to get into the system through any method besides their secure official login, a program designed by the hypnotist would trigger.
It was designed to put the hacker into a trance, have them patch whatever hole they’d found, and most brilliantly, they’d write up a brief summary of what the entry point was and how they’d patched it. So Brandon, persistent as he was, was simply finding the holes in their security, patching them himself, telling them how, and locking himself back out, all without realizing that he was battling with himself.
The hypnotist chuckled.
“We should almost put him on payroll.” She took another sip of her coffee. “Well, I’m glad that’s working well. I just wanted to check in before heading over to Marketing. It’s a disaster over there this week. Keep up the good work!”