This comic was well written with good dialog and pacing. I liked the art very much. And on the whole they made some very interesting choices in covering interesting subject matter.
But I do have to say that it seemed odd to make the hacktivists also be Silicon Valley CEOs. This isn't what hackers tend to actually be like. Facebook had an actual role in the Tunisian civil war which was that it was a platform of communication for protestors and when the Tunisian government began to use it to spy on the protestors, Facebook added https encryption to prevent this. It's perfectly reasonable for a fictional story to diverge from this, but to diverge in a way which reenforces Silicon Valley's existing and clearly overblown savior complex is, well, kind of disappointing, especially when it in many ways undercuts the very meaning of the term "hacktivist".
The other thing which bothered me is that I have a PhD in computer science and did my thesis in and teach classes about computer and information security, so I'm pretty well on top of the reality of hacking and computer and network technology. This tries very hard to be both cutting edge and accurate. But, in practice, they wind up randomly stretching the bounds of some things because there are parts of how some things work that the authors just doesn't get. It's frustrating because it's clear that they've been talking to people who know what they're talking about, but that there are bits that they just don't get and that comes through. They know enough to mention TOR and distributed hash tables, but not enough to understand what they are, how they work, and what they can do. Because this is all fiction, I don't mean to be super hard on them. They're clearly trying. But it was bad enough at times that it got in the way of immersion in the story.