On the third day, she broke her silence not with a video, but with a legal notice posted to a newly created Twitter handle. "I am aware that a private moment of mine has been doctored and distributed without consent. To the misogynists dissecting my body for memes: I hope your hard drives are clean. To my supporters: Stand against the leak, not the victim. Legal action has commenced against 47 handles." This response shifted the narrative. Suddenly, the discussion pivoted from "What did Mona do?" to "Who leaked it?" A unique evolution of this controversy was the rise of "discussion about the discussion." By day four, journalists had stopped looking for the video. Instead, they were analyzing the reactions to the video.
If you or someone you know has been affected by non-consensual sharing of private images, contact the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (cybercrime.gov.in) or the Tamil Nadu Women Helpline 181.
As of May 2026, Mona remains off social media, focusing on therapy and a legal victory. The memes have dried up; the news cycle has moved on. But the servers where the video resides remain a ticking time bomb.