Within hours of the tool’s private beta, a message appeared in the company’s encrypted chat. It wasn’t a customer. It was an executive from a major telecommunications firm—someone who stood to lose millions if IMEI Gurus’ tool went public.
Elias looked at the "Latest Tool" icon on his desktop. To the corporate giants, it was a threat to their bottom line. To the people in his neighborhood—the students with second-hand phones they couldn't afford to activate, the refugees trying to reach home—it was freedom. imei-gurus-llc-service-latest-tool
"You’re sitting on a wildfire," the message read. "We’re prepared to buy the tool, the source code, and your silence." Within hours of the tool’s private beta, a