I think the IGNSOC website is no fake. It connects too well with MGSV in ways that would not have been predictable, and this whole connection starts at the very beginning of Chapter 2.
edit: BTW the site no longer mentions any console platforms.
https://youtu.be/cwowXkysk2o?t=11284
Ingsoc is the political ideology of the totalitarian government of Oceania in George Orwell's dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.
The first thing that happens at the start of Chapter 2: Kaz tells everyone that even with SF dead they have not exercised their revenge, because Cipher is still out there. He follows this with "
we know they've planted spies among us".
THAT is a reference of Nineteen Eighty Four.
He blames an imaginary enemy that can never actually be defeated and which is faceless, "we know they've planted spies, parasites, among us", and that everyone has to watch over everyone, basically mistrust one another, and to "
Report everything. It's the only way to protect ourselves.".
"From here on out" (look at how BB and Ocelot look at him when he says that) "you will be my eyes. The deadliest enemy is right here in our midst."
Kaz speaks like a "
Big Brother" propagandist in 1984.
Not only are his eyes weird, they kind of look like Code Talker's. When BB asked him if anything was done to his eyes, Kaz says "no it's just bright...". Really? Plus, when CT is possessed by the parasites speaking to him, he recites what you would expect a spy to say; "secret meetings between containers, Ocelot's aim is off today", etc., and then says "
eyes on Kaz, a message from the parasites". If the parasites are speaking these things to CT (he says it's a message
from the parasites), it means they can "see" and hear things; they are reporting to CT about what they have seen. The parasites can be used as a communication/intel gathering device, and they have been around for a long time, decades, centuries, recording everything? Logically, Cipher/AI would eventually be able to store all that info. Nice little way of justifying that the AIs would know everything (except supposedly Ocelot hypnotizing himself lol).
That website had morse code which revealed the sentence ""IS THERE SUCH A THING AS AN ABSOLUTE, TIMELESS ENEMY?"". That's a quote form The Boss, but it ties in perfectly to the idea of IGNSOC and what Kaz says above with his obsession about an enemy that in a way can't really ever be defeated, that is faceless, that might not even exist.
Huey's first interrogation foreshadows that Kaz is the "real" spy, just look at how the scene is directed when Huey says "what about him?".
Big Brother personifies the Inner Party, as the ubiquitous face constantly depicted in posters and the telescreen. Thus, Big Brother is constantly watching. Ingsoc demands the complete submission – mental, moral and physical – of the people, and will torture to achieve it (see Room 101). Ingsoc is a masterfully complex system of psychological control that compels confession to imagined crimes and the forgetting of rebellious thought in order to love Big Brother and the Party over oneself.
Some reading for fun, because it really sounds like there might be more 1984-related stuff in MG's future:
Big Brother is claimed to be the leader (either the actual enigmatic dictator or perhaps a symbolic figurehead) of Oceania, a totalitarian state wherein the ruling Party wields total power "for its own sake" over the inhabitants.
In the society that Orwell describes, every citizen is under constant surveillance by the authorities, mainly by telescreens (with the exception of the Proles). The people are constantly reminded of this by the slogan "Big Brother is watching you": a maxim which is ubiquitously on display.
In the novel, it is never made totally clear whether Big Brother is or had been a real person, or was simply a creation by the Party to personify itself.
In Party propaganda, Big Brother is presented as one of the founders of the Party, along with Goldstein. At one point, Winston Smith, the protagonist of Orwell's novel, tries "to remember in what year he had first heard mention of Big Brother. He thought it must have been at some time in the sixties, but it was impossible to be certain. In the Party histories, of course, Big Brother figured as the leader and guardian of the Revolution since its very earliest days. His exploits had been gradually pushed backwards in time until already they extended into the fabulous world of the forties and the thirties, when the capitalists in their strange cylindrical hats still rode through the streets of London..." In the year 1984, Big Brother appears on posters and telescreens as a handsome man in his mid-40s, but he may be long dead, if he ever existed at all.
In the book The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism, read by Winston Smith and purportedly written by Goldstein, Big Brother is referred to as infallible and all-powerful. No-one has ever seen him and there is a reasonable certainty that he will never die. He is simply "the guise in which the Party chooses to exhibit itself to the world", since the emotions of love, fear and reverence are more easily focussed on an individual (if only a face on the hoardings and a voice on the telescreens), than an organisation. When Winston Smith is later arrested, O'Brien repeats that Big Brother will never die. When Smith asks if Big Brother exists, O'Brien describes him as "the embodiment of the Party" and says that he will exist as long as the Party exists. When Winston asks "Does Big Brother exist the same way I do?" (meaning is Big Brother an actual human being), O'Brien replies "You do not exist" (meaning that Smith is now an unperson; an example of doublethink).
Will we eventually find out in a future MG title that, in fact, Big Boss never actually existed?
