Anyone looking for clarification can hardly avoid the hackers from Anonymous.

"Now we're in the castle" is the combative sentence in a video that the collective is now delighting its Twitter followers with.

The hackers are said to have access to the Kremlin's surveillance system and are providing the first evidence of this.

More than two dozen film sequences show everyday life in the Russian presidential administration with tens of thousands of employees who have been responsible for the bombing, murder and massacre since February 24.

Young men and women arrange glasses, test microphones and prepare meeting documents.

What is going on in their heads?

Another camera shot shows discussions in a panel of speakers.

It is not possible to find out what is being discussed.

The recordings are silent, lip reading would help.

Another video shows empty rooms, pompous banquet halls from Tsarist times, Soviet-style foyers, offices of the Kremlin staff.

The wallpaper design is not good, neither is the light.

Does that allow conclusions to be drawn about Putin's actions?

The tables are long.

There doesn't seem to be any closeness in the Kremlin.

Brief fragments of meetings in screened-off conference rooms keep cropping up.

The fact that "Big Brother" is watching now also applies to Putin's staff.

Putin in pajamas or his generals drinking to their hearts' content?

It's scary to watch this administration that's at war with Ukraine right now.

The bureaucratic routine conveyed by the videos is oppressive.

The men in suits and ties, the women in smart suits laugh, smirk, discuss as if they had nothing to do with the war.

In military history, the war machine has always been controlled from a desk.

So it's almost reassuring that one of the most effective guards in the world couldn't withstand the attacks of the activist computer nerds.

In recent weeks, Anonymous has hacked into Russian companies, banks, media houses and state institutions as it declared cyber war on Russia after the war began.

The hacker collective thus also became a war party and successfully fought against Russia's state-owned computer cracks.

The western digital armada is targeting the highest level of government.

Will we see pictures of Putin in pajamas soon?

His generals drinking frustration?

Or videos of ministers shaking before the autocrat's next insane decision.

"We won't stop until we've uncovered all of their secrets.

They won't be able to stop us," the digital declaration of war reads.

The Kremlin has not yet commented.

But Putin and his staff need to wrap up warm because now, the hackers claim, every corner of the castle can be spied on.

There has probably never been so much transparency in the Kremlin.