A new hacking group in cyberspace called "Egyptian Cyber Army" replaced last week an audio recording of ISIS leader on the group's social media accounts with a song and its transcript with a logo resembling that of the Egyptian military. During an interview with Mashable, the hacking group spokesperson, claimed to be a 37-year-old former Cairo police officer named Khaled Abubakr, said Monday that the Egyptian Cyber Army is clearly inspired by the infamous Syrian hacktivist group, but the group's members are all Egyptians — some civilians, some with a military or police background — all sympathizers of the Egyptian government led by former Commander-in-Chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Baghdadi "was delivering a message to all extremists all over the Middle East and my country that you have to use your weapons in the faces of the government and our people so we took it down and replaced it with a very popular song," the spokesman explained. Experts who have been tracking the group confirmed that the group's actions suggest they're pro-government and anti-ISIS, but it's unclear who is really behind the group, and whether they're sanctioned by the Egyptian government.