There’s no denying that some of us can be a little too obsessed with our music idols; lining up for hours for a signature or creeping around the backdoors of venues to catch a selfie opp with our rock Gods, but how many of you have thought of hacking your favourite artists’ official websites as a grand gesture for attention?

That’s exactly what a particularly frustrated person (or persons) by the handle of Ethical Dragon has done after being ignored by their adored celebrities online, hilariously hacking their way through to the likes of Justin Timberlake, Beyoncé and Linkin Park’s official websites and social media platforms to let these artists know how pissed they are, as Music Feeds details.

What scorned Ethical Dragon so? Pop stars not checking their inbox…

Justin Timberlake was the hardest hit, with the 20/20 artists’ official website crashing and instead appearing with nothing but a blank page that read “Don’t ignore my emails” with a contact e-mail for JT to hit up. On top of that, a tweet was sent from Timberlake’s official Twitter that read “Hacked by Ethical Dragon.” (“Cry me a river”, says Justin? We’ll have to wait and see.)

But that’s not all, Beyoncé too was burnt by the ethical fire of the cyber dragon, Queen Bey’s official website displaying the same warning content as Timberlake, although it was swiftly recovered and set back to its original state.

Ethical Dragon took to their own Twitter to inform the world that they’d infiltrated the musician’s wesbite, providing a link to a Zone H Archive screenshot proving that their message had in fact reached the ‘Drunk In Love’ songstress’ site.

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The web tirade continued, with Ethical Dragon jumping genre-ship to attack Linkin Park – as discovered by a Reddit user whom was innocently sourcing out some tickets for his “15-year-old daughter.”

Perhaps musicians need to start responding to their fan mail like Ringo Starr to Marge Simpson, we don’t want a real life Eminem ‘Stan’ situation on our hands.

This isn’t the the first instance of the music world being hacked in recent months; there was the NSFW attack on Neil Young’s Twitter earlier this year has still left us a little shaken not to mention the manic meltdown of Moshtix rocking Splendour In The Grass ticket sales earlier this year.

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