Logo

January 2023 Logs.zip ⟶

1 SWIFT/BIC code across 1 country.

US(1 code)

SWIFT/BIC
PUVLUS42

Get an account with Swift/BIC code details on WeWire

Access SWIFT/BIC code details for banks worldwide. Create a WeWire account to make fast, secure cross-border payments to 80+ countries.

Settled $1bn in transactions to
80+ countries

WeWire supports these and many others

USD flag

USD

GBP flag

GBP

GHS flag

GHS

NGN flag

NGN

XAF flag

XAF

AED flag

AED

+74
more

Expand your business to foreign markets

Make cross-border transfers to 80+ countries and enjoy virtual wallets and account features, fast payments, competitive rates on a variety of currency pairs and a whole lot more perks.

Create an Account

January 2023 Logs.zip ⟶

It was a photo taken from inside the technician's booth, looking out through the glass. In the reflection of the window, you can see E. Vance holding the camera. But outside the glass, where the valley should be, there is only a massive, scrolling wall of green binary code, stretching up into a sky that has finally turned off.

“I brought my Nikon P1000 today. The sky over the valley isn't black anymore. There’s a texture to it, like a wet film over a lens. When the relay pulses, the stars 'ripple.' I’m not supposed to be here. I’m supposed to be on vacation. But the gate won't open. The digital lock says it’s January 1st, 1970. The time is looping, but the Hum is getting louder.”

I found it on a corrupted microSD card taped to the underside of a library desk in Seattle. The card was labeled with a single word in Sharpie: . When I plugged it into my air-gapped laptop, there was only one file: JANUARY_2023_LOGS.zip . JANUARY 2023 LOGS.zip

The final file in the ZIP wasn't a log. It was an image: EXIT.jpg .

“The lag is up to six minutes now. I tried to call my wife from the site landline. There was a six-minute silence, and then I heard my own voice—not a recording, but me, breathing. Then, the 'me' on the other end started talking. He told me things I haven't done yet. He told me to stop looking at the sky. He sounded terrified.” It was a photo taken from inside the

The archive contained thirty-one text files—one for every day of the month—and three heavily distorted .wav recordings. The author is identified only as "E. Vance," a night-shift technician for a telecommunications firm.

“The site 4G relay in the valley started vibrating at 2:00 AM. Not the machinery—the air. It’s a low-frequency pulse that makes your teeth ache. Diagnostics show zero mechanical issues. But when I looked at the audio monitor, the wave pattern wasn't random. It looked like a heartbeat. A slow, heavy heartbeat.” But outside the glass, where the valley should

“Something is wrong with the outgoing signals. We’re sending data packets to the satellites, but they’re coming back modified. It’s like someone is catching our 'hello' and sending back a 'goodbye.' I checked the logs for the 12th. Every text message sent through this relay today was mirrored. If someone typed 'I love you,' the receiver got 'uoy evol I.' Everyone thinks it’s a glitch. I think the signal is hitting something… solid… up there.”