Recommended Posts

 

NASA detected, intercepted, and decoded a mathematically-based distress signal from a purportedly doomed planetoid outside our own galaxy.

The signal was detected in January of 1998 but, however and as it might be expected, it took many months to properly decode the message.

NASA experts claim to have intercepted an intergalactic distress call from an alien civilization that had already peaked and was actually dying when saber-tooth tigers still roamed the earth.

The 80,000-year-old SOS was received and digitally recorded in late January 1998.

But only in recent weeks have radio astronomers and language experts found the key to the complex mathematics-based language that enabled them to translate the 'frantic plea for help'.

The world press has been suspiciously silent about the startling message, though lengthy scientific reports are scheduled for publication in two professional journals, Radio Astronomy and Universe.


source

I want to believe, but there's too many red flags here. If NASA received as little as a hint of an artificial signal, it would be major headline news, not on the cover of Weekly World News.  

There hasnt been anything since the WOW signal.... as far as we know... :shifty:

If there was, we'd know. The thing about space, is that it's open to everyone. Not just NASA.

Ridiculous!

 

It took them 16 years to conjure up something that they think is mathematically a message?

 

In other words, they have no clue as to what they are talking about! We sure as heck would've heard of this a long time ago, if it was even remotely real.

I want to believe, but there's too many red flags here. If NASA received as little as a hint of an artificial signal, it would be major headline news, not on the cover of Weekly World News.  

NASA is not free to release just any information, discoveries.

 

They are controlled.

 

Not everything published in tabloids are made up or distorted.

 

On the other hand, there was a Viktor Kulikov -- but he does not appear to be a Doctor, scientist, or connected with the United Nations.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viktor_Kulikov

 

I could not track down if or when this story may have been published in Radio Astronomy or Universe.

 

So, this will have to remain doubtful.

 

I also do not see how you translate some alien math 'code' into English words like 'help'.

 

 

A light year, or the distance light can travel in a year, is over five trillion miles.

 

Believed distance to the Andromeda Galaxy is 2.54 million light-years, or 778 kiloparsecs.

 

80,000 years ... ?

 

Radio waves are also said to break up beyond a certain distance, so how would any clear message arrive from such distances ....

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Google Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer is leaving for OpenAI by Pradeep Viswanathan Noam Shazeer is best known as one of the co-authors of the 2017 “Attention Is All You Need” paper, which introduced the Transformer architecture that now powers most large language models. He also worked on several major Google AI projects, including LaMDA, before leaving the company in 2021 to co-found Character.AI. He also authored the Sparsely-gated Mixture of Experts (2016) paper, which is popular among the AI community. After falling behind OpenAI and Anthropic a couple of years ago, Google brought Shazeer back in 2024 as part of a major deal with Character.AI. Through this deal, along with Noam, several other researchers returned to Google DeepMind. More recently, he was a vice president of engineering at Google and a technical co-lead for Gemini. Today, Noam Shazeer announced on X that he is leaving Google and joining OpenAI. In his post, Shazeer said it was a difficult decision to move on, adding that he was proud of the Google team and what it had built together. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman welcomed the move with a post of his own, saying Shazeer was one of the people he had most wanted to work with since OpenAI’s early days. Google has made strong progress with Gemini over the past year, closing the gap with OpenAI in several areas. But losing Noam Shazeer is a major talent setback for them, especially after bringing him back less than two years ago by spending a fortune. For OpenAI, the hire adds one of the industry’s most experienced language model researchers to a team that is already pushing ahead with ChatGPT, Codex, and its next generation of frontier models.
    • I'm lost too... what did you mean by your first comment then?
    • Couple years ago I got a brand new 4TB Samsung 990 Pro for $250 during Black Friday
    • Thanks
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      eurospharma62 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      With What earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Harris Gilbert earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Vincian earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      541
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      171
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      85
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      64
    5. 5
      neufuse
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!