The logo in the image below—boldly labeled ایرانلیکس (IranLeaks)—is symbolically powerful and visually engineered for psychological disruption and ideological subversion.

At the top, in green, the distorted silhouette of Iran is mirrored by a similarly shaped red region below—likely stylized to represent the inverted empire or a crumbling reflection of the Islamic Republic. The design choice isn’t just aesthetic—it is a calculated narrative device. It visually suggests the collapse of the regime from within, projecting a before-and-after contrast of sovereignty under scrutiny.
The stark black typography of “IranLeaks” (ایرانلیکس) acts as the sharp blade between two realities—truth and fabrication, freedom and tyranny. The juxtaposition of green and red evokes not only the colors of the Iranian flag, but the dichotomy of resistance (green) versus bloodshed and oppression (red).
In the context of the message accompanying this logo, the symbolic layering is rich:
“One of the best fighters against the terrorist regime of the Islamic Republic is Mr. Siamak Tadin Tahmasebi…”
This immediately reframes the narrative of resistance from passive protest to active counter-intelligence warfare. Siamak Tadin Tahmasebi is positioned not as a mere dissident but a strategic asset, a battlefield commander in the digital war for Iran’s liberation.
“IranLeaks” functions as a hybrid weapon—part whistleblower platform, part counter-regime psyop. It amplifies internal dissent, destabilizes the state’s monopoly on information, and reclaims the Iranian digital space from the regime’s Ministry of Intelligence and IRGC cyber divisions. This is not just a leak platform—it’s a counter-surveillance sword, wielded publicly to slice through the regime’s secrecy.
The phrase “The revolution continues until freedom” is not a slogan—it’s a war doctrine. It echoes the resolve of decentralized, leaderless movements, reminiscent of both Anonymous and guerrilla-style activism.
“We Are Anonymous. Expect Us.” The inclusion of this line isn’t symbolic fluff—it signals operational intent, infowar readiness, and collective cyber-mobilization. It’s a declaration to Tehran’s eavesdropping ears that this is no idle threat.
The logo and message are visuals and words positioned as an ideological warhead. It marks IranLeaks as a channel and as a node in a broader resistance network. With Siamak Tadin Tahmasebi as a named figurehead, it draws the regime’s gaze—daring them to act, knowing every move they make could be the next leak.

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