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Case File
d-26780House OversightOther

Nonsensical quantum Morse code text with no actionable leads

The document consists of random binary strings, vague references to quantum theory and one‑time pads, and no concrete names, dates, transactions, or allegations involving any influential actors. It of Contains random binary sequences and unrelated terms (e.g., "titi", "LOTTI"). Mentions one‑time pads and WWII code‑breaking without specific historical or current relevance. No identifiable persons,

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #016027
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The document consists of random binary strings, vague references to quantum theory and one‑time pads, and no concrete names, dates, transactions, or allegations involving any influential actors. It of Contains random binary sequences and unrelated terms (e.g., "titi", "LOTTI"). Mentions one‑time pads and WWII code‑breaking without specific historical or current relevance. No identifiable persons,

Tags

noisecryptographyhouse-oversightquantum-theory

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Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Free Will morse message 00000 my photon your photon Decoded1l Decoded2 10100 11011 random 01111 0 titi 10101 01010 opposite 1 00000 01001 00101 random 01100 0 337 tigi 01000 LOTTI opposite 11111 1 Quantum Morse Machine A Simple Free Will Theorem In the quantum Morse machine, I do transmit information faster than the speed of light. But the information I have transmitted is useless as it is, in effect, encrypted using a one-time pad. The only person in possession of a copy of this one-time pad is me: the sender. Claude Shannon proved a one-time pad is unbreakable during the Second World War. Yet the British succeeded in breaking it. How was this possible? The fatal weakness in the German one-time pads was the random numbers used to code the messages were generated by a machine, and were therefore not truly random. The numbers followed a sequence, and it was possible for Allied code breakers to work out the sequence and decode the messages. It follows that if we believe no message can propagate faster than the speed of light, my sequence of numbers must be non-computable. There must be no algorithm or computation that could generate it. Otherwise it would be liable to the same sort of decryption attack that the one-time pads suffered. If sequences of random measurements taken in the universe are non-computable it follows the Universe as a whole must be non-computable. There are a few holes you could pick in this argument. Would it be sufficient if it were impossible to decrypt the message in the age of the Universe? What if there was an algorithm, but it was practically unknowable? But, I am talking here of principle. In principle, the Universe must be non-decryptable.

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