You already duped one baker into accepting that into notables. You may take it out of rotation now.
That was a parody article from nscooper.com (now defunct).
My money is on Helicopter.
Hmm. This is a local government open forum. The more prominent speaker is a guy named Dane Wigington. He gets a remarkably strong applause after he finished his speech. He is then followed by a succession of people with suspiciously similar beliefs about geoengineering.
Dane Wigington turns out to be the owner and operator of GeoEngineeringWatch.org. Obviously, this Wigington guy orchestrated what we see in this video.
I've seen his website before. I dismissed it because there is an awful lot on there that is simply wrong. But I'll dig around to see if I can find the "verifiable data" he mentions about the composition of the aerosols.
Thanks for the tip.
Kek! My early suspicions were correct. I just found a pic of wave cloud I posted here mockingly a little while ago that I found in Wikipedia. The little pic he has on his site makes it look like a transmitter is affecting clouds. The full-size pic shows that it's actually an effect from the air passing over an obstruction (an island). He got this from wikipedia, so he knows what it really is, and he is misrepresenting it to make his case about EM transmissions.
Nope. I don't trust anything that comes from this guy.
>>3945702 (prev bread)
https://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/geoengineering-frequency-transmissions-and-weather-warfare/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave_cloud
Wrong pic. This one.
Someone posted that last night. TL:DR: No, it doesn't.
I dug up this about it:
https://steemit.com/crypto/@defango/vqc-postings-cracking-rsa-and-ecc-encryption
I'm not a mathematician. I don't know it might have potential to lead to a future solution. It involves precomputing a set of numbers spanning the range of possible solutions. Right away I can see that this is not a viable approach to factoring 4096 bit numbers.
It's been in the internet for nearly a year and we don't see mathematicians getting excited and security vendors panicking.
Notable
Nah. Those are standard plastic 5gal buckets. They were probably filled with some liquid that kept them cool.