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Post by Admin Horan on May 10, 2015 18:31:59 GMT -6
I've lost track of where I got this—remind me, someone, and I'll update this thread. In the mean time, although I'm not sure I believe that there is any actual message contained in the 340, this is the best attempt I've seen:
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ekh
Junior Member
Orders accepted.
Posts: 90
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Post by ekh on Apr 18, 2018 23:35:31 GMT -6
Though it's not correct, I stumbled across a proposed solution to the 340 in the FBI files and thought it was interesting as some other proposed solution revolve around poetry too. Also recently in the news, the supercomputer that was designed to crack the 340 started writing poetry or at least something that resembles poetry. Posting for others to see.
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Post by Admin Horan on Apr 19, 2018 9:58:06 GMT -6
It's interesting that the Feebs made an unwarranted assumption--that the 340 used the same overall encryption method. Also, how little actual effort they put into "cracking" it.
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Post by dt2016 on Apr 3, 2020 20:54:03 GMT -6
The Herb Cain solution I believe was by Graysmith or I know he did have one probably to confuse others even more. I heard it was pretty good at the time though. I would like to see the hashtag solution you've found as I bet it's much closer than any that people have come up with previously.
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Post by Admin Horan on Apr 5, 2020 6:38:38 GMT -6
Hash stream ;-) It's not mine. It came from someone else. They did not know that I already had a hypothesis concerning what the 340 was about. So I was impressed. However, they did not send me their working notes, so I can't verify it. But another thing intrigued me--this other person didn't realize it, but some of the words are English, some are Japanese, and some are maybe Tagalog. Which would make brute force cracking impossible. When I get ready to release a Map Code video, I'll probably release that solution then. But I don't even know who the person is who produced it.
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Post by dt2016 on Dec 11, 2020 19:18:51 GMT -6
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Post by Admin Horan on Dec 12, 2020 7:55:56 GMT -6
Yeah, it "fits." Very conveniently. But they don't show their work, just a vague description that sounds suspiciously similar to "the Bible code." Remember that one? Plus a whole lot of fudging to make it fit a preconceived notion about what it "says." You could do that to any random paragraph of 340 characters and get the same result.
Here's what I don't get--what's the point of running all those risks to get it printed in the papers, if it's just more twaddle about "paradice slaves," that no one will be able to decipher? And if they did "crack" the 340, so what? It doesn't contain any information about any actual crimes.
I was about to show people what I found cracking the Map Code and the "code within the code" of the 408, but there's no hurry, now. It will take several months for real experts--if they bother--to weigh in on this Corey Starliper stuff.
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