The account, operated under the name "Yaqeen Hamad" and using the handle @Israelinreal, has shifted its activities to a Telegram channel where the disclosures continue.
In a statement posted on its channels, the pro-Palestinian group said it had obtained information on Mossad spies as well as Israel's military intelligence directorate Aman, the domestic security service Shin Bet, and Unit 8200 "through hidden and open sources".
It vowed to gradually reveal their identities "so that people around the world can better recognize the true face of these criminals".
The group claimed its leaks would "challenge the myth of the impenetrability of Israeli intelligence organizations and show that these individuals are more accessible than they think".
Among the first individuals named was Guy Sagi, described by the group as a senior and veteran Mossad officer, with his phone numbers and home address published alongside photographs.
In a subsequent post, the cyber group released details about Eran Prinsa, identified as a younger Mossad officer who previously served in Unit 8200, joined the agency part-time in 2011, and later became a full-time member.
According to the group, Prinsa studied political science and international relations, researched the Cuban Missile Crisis, and completed courses in diplomacy and security at Tel Aviv University.
The X account of Yaqeen Hammad cyber group was suspended shortly after the initial posts, but the associated Telegram channel remains active and continues to publish similar material.
The pro-Palestinian cyber collective “Yaqeen Hamad” explicitly drew its name from Yaqeen Hammad, an 11-year-old Palestinian girl and social media influencer from Gaza who was martyred in an Israeli airstrike in May 2025.
Before her brutal murder by the Israile regime’s war machine, the young bright girl had gained widespread attention for her poignant TikTok and Instagram videos in which she documented the daily struggle for survival under bombardment, shared tips on finding food and water, and helped coordinate humanitarian aid distributions amid the war that Palestinians and numerous human-rights organizations have described as genocidal.
Widely celebrated across the Muslim world and among pro-Palestinian activists as a “beacon of hope” and a symbol of civilian resilience, her memory has since been invoked by resistance-aligned groups as a rallying emblem of defiance against the Zionist occupation.