They talk about their ongoing computer hacking.
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Story behind the song
David Di Pietro is having a phone call about a cell phone conversation he is able to record from the night before, or from early that morning. Toward the end, he mentions one of the people he bugged, and says "She's just now leaving." As this is going on, to no one's surprise, there is a public conversation about the computers they go into. They talk about everything being "in her computer" and about getting "his computer picked," in their ongoing, unabashed behavior (it only gets embarrassing when the few people they don't want to know about these things find out, but otherwise, when it's only them, and the people to whom they do it, it's fine, though explaining being fixated in people they find pathetic is also difficult to explain).
Lyrics
A group of people bugged a girl's home, car, and phone. They put hidden webcams in her bedroom, bathroom (including in her shower), and home. They watched her and her visitors, younger friends and relatives, between the ages of several months to 17 years old.
Do people really do this? How do people who are harassed and secretly videotaped feel? Here is only one account, though the perpetrators were younger than David di Pietro, in his twenties and thirties, now only a few years from forty and still behaving like a twisted perverted miscreant:
http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2011/apr/23/tweeting-deleting-help-build-rutgers-webcam-case/