Anonymous ID: 1aedcb Nov. 6, 2020, 8:20 a.m. No.11500733   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0779 >>0797 >>0843 >>1183

Hi. I am a PhD physics candidate in his 5th year.

 

I see a reference to a quantum system of some sort for ballot watermarking or tracking. To my mind, this could only mean the use of "quantum dots" as basis for a labeling scheme. "Quantum dots" are sort of like fluorescent very large molecules. They are proposed for use in various schemes, but they have a property of being fluorescent to a highly tunable narrow (single) frequency. I don't think other quantum information technologies are present for any sort of use of quantum properties such an encrypted quantum state or an object that could be 'tracked' in a direct or easy way.

 

The quantum dots, in theory, could be in the ballot, and could be spatially arranged in ways that encode, as well as having different combinations of fluorescent frequencies that they react to upon light being shined on them. For example, maybe dots were reliable made for 3 or 4 frequencies, and laid out in a pattern of consecutive rectangles. What is interesting, is the DHS or someone else could in theory have placed machines in the US mail system that could track the motion of these objects automatically as they were sorted, right along with stamp-checking, etc.

 

  • Of course I could be wrong, this is not the field I study. -

 

So consider that the INFOWARS interview is maybe an ignorant riff off of a misunderstanding of a misunderstanding of something maybe someone said…

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_dot