You know what really grinds my gears? When people treat BTS like open-source software. Jimin and Jungkook just returned from the military, showed a glimpse of their bond on a Weverse live—and some genius fans decide that means it’s prime time to hack their account mid-stream. Because apparently the boys should always be available, 24/7, like tech support.
So here’s the scene: Jimin and Jungkook drop a surprise livestream on July 13, full of playful banter and behind-the-scenes hype about their spring 2026 comeback. They tease the finalized title track, mock each other, and rally around each other like the inseparable duo we adore—until, bam, someone keeps trying to log into their account right in the middle of it. Jimin, understandably peeved, goes from playful to pissed: “You already know too much about us… please stop.” And yes, he totally told the intruder to back right off.

Let’s be real: this is not fan love. It’s invasive. It’s sasaeng-level obsession. We’ve seen the virus before—Jungkook nearly had someone try to break into his home the day he was discharged from the military. And they pick this moment? During a heartfelt stream that’s supposed to hype their return? Unreal.
Fans across the board are furious. How dare anyone think it’s acceptable to flirt with breaching someone’s privacy like they’re just part of the show. They’re artists, sure—and global superstars—but also human beings with boundaries. Arguably, we’re past the era where random hacker stunts are considered entertainment.
Even in the flurry of electric Jikook vibes—teasing their music, referencing “Soda Pop” from K-pop Demon Hunters, and joking about mimicking Taehyung—the hacking feeler forced Jimin to inject serious real-world terms: “Enough!”. He didn’t snap and overreact; he set a boundary. Which is exactly what they’re supposed to do.
Let’s cut the nostalgic or romantic filter: as exciting as the comeback hype is, it can’t come at the expense of their mental peace or safety. Spring 2026 is supposed to be fireworks, not drama over invasive tech stunts.
So here’s the outrage served hot: stop hacking them, stop stalking them, and stop acting like you’re entitled to live intrusion because you’re a fan. This isn’t fan service—it’s fan malpractice. And ARMY knows better.
Let’s hype the comeback. Let’s tease the song. Let’s celebrate Jimin’s big brother energy keeping spoilers locked. But let’s also put a full stop sign in front of hacking attempts and privacy invasions.
BTS belongs to ARMY—and to the world. But their privacy belongs only to them. Use that massive fandom power to defend them, not break them.