Crime And Punishment.vk Guide
“Yes?”
Alexey looked at the paper. At the bottom of the printout, VK had automatically added a suggested tag:
VK didn’t forget anything. That was the real punishment.
On the seventh night, he opened a new post. Private. Only visible to himself. crime and punishment.vk
Alexey hadn't meant to kill her. Not really.
He didn’t mean to kill her. But when he showed up at her apartment that night, the old letter opener from her desk ended up in her chest before either of them fully understood what was happening.
Three days later, he made a mistake. He logged into his own VK account. “Yes
In the interrogation room, the detective slid a printout across the table. It was his deleted draft post — timestamped, IP-matched, and recovered from VK’s servers.
The lie felt electric. He was controlling the narrative. He was inside the crime scene, walking around unseen.
He felt… nothing. Then everything. Then nothing again. On the seventh night, he opened a new post
But VK autosaves drafts. Even deleted ones go to a folder called “Recovered.” He didn’t know that.
Here is a story built around that idea. 1. The Status Update
Every day, the algorithm showed him memories . “One year ago today, you and Katya went to that concert.” “Five years ago, you joined the group ‘Philosophy of Despair.’” “Katya liked your post from 2018.”
And then came the suggested friends : Katya’s mother. Katya’s best friend. The detective who had just made a VK page under a fake name (Alexey noticed — the account was two days old and had only three profile photos, all generic). The algorithm didn't know it was building a cage around him. It just kept recommending connections.
Then he deleted the draft.



