I work in air conditioning and have to go into peoples houses when their AC breaks down, about 6 years ago i went to work at this one guys house, while i was in another room, the home owner was having a conference call on speaker phone where i could hear people rattling off random numbers and he would write them down on a note pad while occasionally chiming in and responding with a set of numbers back. I remember the whole thing made me really uncomfortable.
@animateddepression5 ай бұрын
BINGO!
@matthaxx71375 ай бұрын
Yeah, or maybe he was just playing Battleships with his mates...
@surfside755 ай бұрын
@@matthaxx7137 -😂
@Shred_Tube5 ай бұрын
Using a phone to relay cyrptographic info literally defeats the purpose of it. I also would highly someone with the knowledge and skills to communicate in such a way would do so while complete strangers are in the same room, that also defeats the purpose of encrypted messages
@Chris_at_Home5 ай бұрын
Were they IP addresses?
@pirobot668beta5 ай бұрын
When I was in US Army Signal Corps, an instructor told us that these stations weren't broadcasting any real data...the strange sounds and other audible features were a means for the station to authenticate itself. "The real message comes the day the station goes dark and stays dark." The exact time and date would correspond to a 'code book' entry informing agents what to do next.
@John-wd5cb5 ай бұрын
"The Division".
@timoakes4505 ай бұрын
@@John-wd5cb ILLUMINATE please ??????IS this A NSA/DIA op???Stay behinds/GLADIO II?????in us????
@Bones-Radio5 ай бұрын
Channel markers to keep the frequency open is what im told. Interesting I never though about it like that.
@Bones-Radio5 ай бұрын
@tripplefives1402 yes I see that all the time
@92GreyBlue5 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service I really mean it.
@MattCatt095 ай бұрын
The old Soviet numbers stations were by far the creepiest. Something about the accent, and the times in which they were broadcast. 😨
@heroscapewarrior42175 ай бұрын
What was the point of the numbers stations?
@vampiro42365 ай бұрын
@@heroscapewarrior4217Spies and saboteurs going back to WW1 are at times given something called a “one time pad.” The pad is essentially a key to decrypt messages being sent as “random” number sequences by the station. The coded messages being sent are theoretically unbreakable because the key (the one time pad) is a completely random pattern, it can only be used once, the message and key are always the same length and only the sender/receiver have copies of the key itself.
@b.s.76935 ай бұрын
Yes, feels like an uncanny valley effect of some sort
@MattCatt095 ай бұрын
@@heroscapewarrior4217 Secret codes broadcast to spies abroad, supposedly
@FilthyIrishbastard5 ай бұрын
@@heroscapewarrior4217it was codes for staff in points beyond
@PrayingToTheAlien5 ай бұрын
Crazy to think that in 2024 Numbers Stations are still a good way of transmitting information - goes to show the strength of a good code and cipher.
@azynkron5 ай бұрын
The key here is that you can transmit your message without code and completely open. Hence, radio is a very cheap and inconspicuous device and it doesn't matter if the enemy is listening in. It's a one way system.
@Jewish-Hammer5 ай бұрын
I’m sure these radio stations are used in coordination with Dark Net sites that constantly update their codes for use by foreign intelligence agencies operating within rival countries.
@DFord-rv3nz3 ай бұрын
A lot of TV stations and Comcast corporate were Beta up to around 2010
@jpht196423 күн бұрын
@@azynkron, walking around with a radio these days,😊 could be more suspicious than you think.
@AlKaseltzer875 ай бұрын
If Pokemon has taught me anything, that radio station, HM01 contains cut and it can be used outside battle after obtaining the cascade badge.
@Mrwaffles-gr3so5 ай бұрын
Underrated comment
@aqdrobert5 ай бұрын
I rubbed the Captain's back to relieve his sea sickness.
@johngancarcik56823 ай бұрын
@@aqdrobert in the safari zone I found a dudes teeth
@aqdrobert3 ай бұрын
@@johngancarcik5682 May you receive STRENGTH to move BOULDERS!
@don633 ай бұрын
Lol I love it 😂😅
@reilashiryu7335 ай бұрын
This video feels super nostalgic in style, I remember when you did this type of video when you used captions instead of speaking. Hearing it was a real nice touch to something that brought me back to the early days of this channel. Nice video!
@JohnSheppard1055 ай бұрын
I used to LOVE this channel years ago when it was only text...still a good channel but this is the first time ive seen it again in a long time
@thomaspunt26465 ай бұрын
We just want the numbers, Mason. That's all we've ever wanted.
@UncVEVO5 ай бұрын
I KEEP HEARING THE FU**ING NUMBERS!
@martinhulinАй бұрын
@@UncVEVOWHAT DO THE NUMBERS MEAN
@GeorgeLiquor5 ай бұрын
LES-1 isn't the only zombie satellite. I've picked up TRANSIT 5B-5 several times, transmitting nonsense telemetry on 136.658
@tan4uk695 ай бұрын
He said there was 6 of them
@paladinstar5 ай бұрын
Why does this scare me lol
@TNHogs4 ай бұрын
Oddly the number of likes you have on this comment 🤔
@farlandu_wmv4 ай бұрын
mHz, i assume?
@brys5554 ай бұрын
@@farlandu_wmv MHz, it's hard to send anything on mHz band
@flickingbollocks55425 ай бұрын
Numbers stations have been going since WW1 I remember 50 years ago listening to them like the Lincolnshire poacher station and many more with all sorts of accents and languages. I had flick all idea what it was about other than espionage.
@Factsnotfox5 ай бұрын
I remember reading about some radio broadcaster that was doing this in South America in the 1970s.
@renegade53995 ай бұрын
Ringway Manchester. He's covered all of these already. He's a really good source of info for this stuff.
@Bones-Radio5 ай бұрын
I have been listening to websdr from Gotland Island and Poland to monitor certain channels. Some very strange signals, pirates, oddities, and wartime transmissions out there. I make videos on my channel when I find something interesting. I love this topic, great video man - cheers from Canada
@danieldavis86075 ай бұрын
I love this topic! I'm your 3rd subscriber.
@b1r2y3n5 ай бұрын
I’m the 6th!
@julian_david45565 ай бұрын
17th!
@Bones-Radio5 ай бұрын
@@b1r2y3n Thank you for the support !
@Bones-Radio5 ай бұрын
@@julian_david4556 Nice ! thanks for helping me grow the channel
@chada755 ай бұрын
Fun Fact. 84 Year old ARCA race team owner Wayne Peterson was an Army Decoder. He broke a Important Vietnam vode and was awarded a medal of service from President Reagan.
@FrankNStein-bw4gf5 ай бұрын
What's a vode?
@kylegreene13565 ай бұрын
I'm glad he broke the "vode"
@creid75375 ай бұрын
@@kylegreene1356I think he meant vase
@nommadd57585 ай бұрын
@@FrankNStein-bw4gf : (typo - 'v' next to 'c' on keyboard)
@northernprepper698121 күн бұрын
Fun
@MoldyBones275 ай бұрын
I once bought a collection of old martial arts movies that came in a boxset. I don’t recall what movie it was among them but at one point in the movie the dubbed over voices dropped and it changed to two German male voices speaking for roughly 4 minutes then it went back to normal.. secret messages? Or editing issues… I’ll never know..
@RM-th8ol5 ай бұрын
Those first numbers translated to "Del Taco has better tacos than Taco Bell. Keep on DL"
@spookedjunglist5 ай бұрын
100%
@karlmadsen31795 ай бұрын
My code book validates that decryption.
@babayaga74345 ай бұрын
Psychological warfare, because TB beats DT to the ground
@richardtibbetts5745 ай бұрын
@@babayaga7434 Taco Boy!!
@zerocool53955 ай бұрын
You're so wrong, that was a Cuban woman and those numbers loosely translate to "Pollo Tropical is better than La Granja"
@shawnchristopher69935 ай бұрын
I'm surprised the buzzer station didn't make it on here
@SEEYAIAYE5 ай бұрын
The bigger mystery is why a russian is making the signals appear as Bart Simpson or cropped furry art
@neshie97245 ай бұрын
they made a video about the buzzer on their other channel a few years ago
@MidlifeRenaissanceMan5 ай бұрын
WebSDR Art. That is so niche a troll / “because I can” Of all the things you could do with your time…. We certainly live in _interesting times_
@alexhinkle71325 ай бұрын
he touched it in one of his other videos
@oceanaxim5 ай бұрын
...or the DESERT WHOOPER.
@rockymountainlifeprospecti44235 ай бұрын
I live at 9400ft, and now I want to get an antenna and high power radio,more than ever now. Good chance of picking up, maybe some. Who knows? Wild skip for sure.
@Jo-sp5cp5 ай бұрын
You'll survive the reset up there👍
@jaket2k9275 ай бұрын
I suggest starting cheap and affordable for radios and scanners as a hobbyist myself. You need UHF, VHF, ULF, SW, to pick up generally everything. But here's the catch. You have to understand the environment you're in too and be familiar with interferences. Like your car for example has a "Filter" on the alternator because you could hear it on older radios. My Grundig 750 picks up machinery and equipment. Case in point one DXing session I had I was scanning and the deck depot on my ship turned the lights on, the electronic noise sounded like a screaming parrot. My chief laughed as I got up swearing like crazy and rubbing my ears. So here's what I have picked up. Alaska (At sea): CNR-1, Public radio in St.Petersberg Florida, Brother Stair (He's a meme for being hellfire and brimstone) VOA in French. BC (at sea): CNR-1, BBC Australia. Washington State (land): CNR-1 Radio Havana, Radio Havana English, NHK, Radio Pyangyang (Korean) Oregon (Land): Art Bell Coast to Coast FM, Pirate Station ran by White Supremacist, South Asian Music. California (at sea): Jungle Public Radio Brazil, CNR-1, couple HAM stations. The thing is that this is very limited with lots of electronic noise or bad locations. But I encourage you to hit up the DXing (that's the hobby is called) forums and learn more. It's pretty cool and fun. I got started DXing SW when I was in trade school and remembered Oregon has a ton of little weird radio stations.
@edhutton12935 ай бұрын
Get into ham radio. It's so cool@@Jo-sp5cp
@enigma51ted5 ай бұрын
simple CB radio with a 19ft long wire antenna - awesome cheap thrills :) set it horizonal north-south - you get max reception east-to-west. line up the wire east-west, u get max signal north-south :) have both, and your awesome
@Handles_are_good_for_holding5 ай бұрын
There are some fairly simple and not so expensive set ups that can talk to the I.S.S. HAM radios and CBs are fun.
@SS4Mike5 ай бұрын
Those dial tones and phone noises will always be scary idc what anyone thinks 😭😭😭
@AsuranDiablo5 ай бұрын
True, it will forever return my fear of "Will it connect to the internet or not"
@JosephBoxmeyer-u3dАй бұрын
1:01 Such unidentified messages might be cheaper to produce than the calculated estimate of the expense that a desperate enemy may spend in intelligence personnel wasted on trying to decode the nonsense messages.
@pleomele4 ай бұрын
I’m gonna make “do not answer” my voice mail message. 🙂
@sandrafaith5 ай бұрын
Right up my alley. I find number stations fascinating!
@maddtaggz5 ай бұрын
Duuuude! I never unsubscribed from your channel! So good to see you again!
@DarkonXBL5 ай бұрын
4:27 Whiskey Alpha Romeo = War. I'm probably wrong and it doesn't mean actual war, but thought it was interesting.
@westrim5 ай бұрын
But what is it good for?
@dianedenham52595 ай бұрын
@@westrim😂
@creid75375 ай бұрын
Could also mean drinking while driving an Italian sports car.
@olidoran24855 ай бұрын
@@westrim Absolutely nothin'.
@bruceterrell92875 ай бұрын
In the 70s I would play my electric guitar through a pedal and this stuff came through my amplifier late at night. I would call my band mate and have him listen through the telephone. I think either the pedal or the pickup acted like a sort of antenae. We figured that it was some kind of spy stuff. Jeff Tweedy named his album Yankee Hotel Foxtrot after these Irdials that he picked up. The album The Conet Project collected a bunch of these Irdials.
@tonytoes023 күн бұрын
I think it was in a book by Frank Camper that he talked about being in Vietnam and the cheap phonegraph they had picked up some numbers and other code and when they mentioned it to the super secret radio guys they got real quiet and then the next day they didn't have the interference
@daviddavidson32745 ай бұрын
If you double tap a comment it will like it, if you triple tap it will allow you to reply
@Ann-sj4pt5 ай бұрын
No just tap the 3rd speech bubble with the little lines in it.
@flickingbollocks55425 ай бұрын
Neat. thanks just tried it 😁👍now
@flickingbollocks55425 ай бұрын
@@Ann-sj4ptI've just done it on your comment. Try it before you criticise it.
@Ann-sj4pt5 ай бұрын
@@flickingbollocks5542 i’m not criticizing it.i’m just saying how i know it works.if you have found another way hurray for you 🤣
@Ann-sj4pt5 ай бұрын
@@flickingbollocks5542 it doesn’t work i tried it.
@elimoran73455 ай бұрын
Best channel ever, I’ve been following Dark5 since 10 years ago, and I love this video so much as a radio enthusiast, I have listened to several strange number stations
@sjdrifter725 ай бұрын
Why does the guy in the thumbnail look like a cross between an AT-AT driver and a Tie Fighter pilot?
@erukuish5 ай бұрын
AI made Im guessing?
@pirobot668beta5 ай бұрын
Nuke-flash head-gear for pilots. Lenses feature 'shutters' that respond to light levels. Only worn by flight-crews operating in nuke environments.
@nomercyinc67835 ай бұрын
no america pilots use a helmet like this
@troydorr48675 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@keefsmiff5 ай бұрын
The pilot has a cleft pallet ?
@michaelwilliams92345 ай бұрын
“Skyking” is the callsign for all SIOP (Single Integrated Operations Plan) assets which includes nuclear capable bombers, missile silos, communications aircraft (e.g. E-6 Mercury and E-4 Nightwatch), and support aircraft and crews. These take higher priority over EAMs and Force Direction Messages. Because EAMs and FDMs cannot be decoded without the key, it’s impossible to determine if a message is an EAM or FDM. It’s also impossible to know if the encoded message is gibberish just meant to throw off hostile nations who might be listening all the way to a true nuclear launch order.
@anthonydewitt76744 ай бұрын
true.
@sardoislove26745 ай бұрын
You know what I miss about the Cold War? All the subtext...
@seanwatts83425 ай бұрын
"In 2012...." These things have been on non-commercial frequencies _FOR DECADES!_ Cuba also used reel-to-reel and still does sometimes. It's funny to hear an old recording playing the voices BACKWARS.
@fuhkoffandie5 ай бұрын
When the transmission fades in and out, that, in radio land, is called skip😮 and it can actually travel around the world. I have a CB that does this
@nomercyinc67835 ай бұрын
cb radios cant travel the world. that would be hamm radios.
@jameyevans295 ай бұрын
Yes cb can travel the world when conditions are right. I’ve talked to Australia numerous times from the States on lower side band
@jamesaustralian98295 ай бұрын
@@jameyevans29 100% I live In Australia and I remember talking to a bloke in Honolulu that had a 1kw linear in his car
@jameyevans295 ай бұрын
@@jamesaustralian9829 oh yes! I always talked barefoot but there’s some massive stations out there
@tahoma68895 ай бұрын
No, actually, it's called qsb. fading. The term skip describes ionospheric refraction. Where radio signals bounce off the ionosphere in back to Earth and then back and then back and then back and circle the globe.
@mattparker97265 ай бұрын
1:01 Not mysterious at all. That's a encrypted comm for embedded spies.
@oldschooljack34795 ай бұрын
Worked with a guy who had been in a branch of the US armed forces... Army or Air Force, don't really remember as It's been 7 years ago... Anyway, we were working in Illinois and he knew I was from Oklahoma. He asked if I had ever heard of a particular small town. I had heard if it and had actually been there. He told me that he and a handful of members of his unit had been sent there to set up a listening post. Said they were there for a few weeks listening to radio traffic from another country... North Korea, China, someplace like that... Again, I don't remember. But something about that area around that little town allowed them to receive a good enough signal to monitor comms from somewhere across the world. Pretty wild stuff. I'll have to see if I can get ahold of that guy and fill in the details of my foggy memory.
@bryanwheeler16083 ай бұрын
Probably the "something" amounted to a good antenna system, decent radios & a site remote from all the RF interference generated by cities.🙂
@GoodForYou45045 ай бұрын
Yup, the video wasn't even in my notifications.
@John-wd5cb5 ай бұрын
It wasn't even in my suggestions. I have ESP.
@medicbabe2ID5 ай бұрын
Most of them aren't, but this one was 🎉
@Kevan8085 ай бұрын
That's a crazy looking thumbnail. I love it!
@davidponseigo88115 ай бұрын
My son is a US Navy Cryptographic Technician but unfortunately due to his clearance level he can't tell us anything he really does.
@kwilliams5825 ай бұрын
What is the radio that is shown around 9:32 in the video?
@RZRREDD2 ай бұрын
Looks like an ATS120
@heinrichmuller79745 ай бұрын
a lot of people wouldn't believe it, but Cuba has always been very adept at its human intelligence gathering or HUMINT. they certainly took their KGB training and ran with it, so to speak
@John-wd5cb5 ай бұрын
KGB Rules the (electronic) Waves.
@sebastienbolduc56545 ай бұрын
I would say that the Cubans are light years ahead of the KGB. They got that country locked down. It's amazing how many tourists go there every year who are totally ignorant of it. When you enter the country they take a picture of you at the airport. They do that for a reason. They track everything and everyone.
@itiswhatitis1535 ай бұрын
One of my favourite channels of all time!
@blusau85615 ай бұрын
Im the 90s I caught a Sky King broadcast while band scanning. It gave me chills.
@teresatickner75375 ай бұрын
From Australia, please tell more?
@blusau85615 ай бұрын
@@teresatickner7537 Not a lot to tell. "Sky King, Sky King do not answer, message follows." I was listening From Florida.
@45gunner5 ай бұрын
USED TO HEAR THEM FREQUENTLY WHEN ON DEPLOYMENTS, I WAS CREWMAN ON P-3 ORION MARITIME PATROL AIRCRAFT!
@terryjwood5 ай бұрын
I hear them all the time.
@anthonydewitt76744 ай бұрын
@@45gunner i was a tech for the transmitters sk was on.
@elena_m195 ай бұрын
I wish one day I bumped into this guy and recognised his voice.
@danieldavis86075 ай бұрын
The issue would be that this is his "broadcast voice," meaning that his casual, everyday voice would sound noticeably different. You wouldn't recognize him..
@JarheadCrayonEater5 ай бұрын
I wish I didn't have to back up 5 seconds throughout all of his videos to figure out what he said.
@mbnqpl5 ай бұрын
@@JarheadCrayonEatercmon, it's very easy to understand, even to non-native like me.
@Shinobi335 ай бұрын
The channel was wayyyy better when it played the videos to dope trippy music and no voice narration
@Skatterblaster50004 ай бұрын
First one creeped me out to the point where I turned all my lights on and locked my door. Well done 👍
@echosixtyfour5 ай бұрын
unknown radio signals are my favorite mystery
@JerryBump-t3v5 ай бұрын
Catch one from decades ago, good times
@Xfonic4 ай бұрын
I LOVE when you do Number Stations and mysterious signal vids!
@leadpilled55675 ай бұрын
Was a police dispatcher and if the conditions were right we’d get skip with all kinds of crazy stuff
@hotrodmercury394113 күн бұрын
The fact this dude is STILL making vids 10 years later....i used to binge watch you
@davidlabedz20465 ай бұрын
Skyking transmissions are eerie and could preview series internationally problems developing.
@anthonydewitt76744 ай бұрын
i know of them from working there. wish i cold tell but i dont have permission.
@mrrhodeisland96868 күн бұрын
@@anthonydewitt7674From someone in the IC please refrain from highlighting yourself.
@usosaito.namahage4 ай бұрын
Number Stations can be creepy. One such movie that did a thing on them is called The Banshee Chapter.
@cynic55815 ай бұрын
“Underhanded espionage practices”? That’s like saying “frozen ice” or “illegal crime”.
@fdalpete5 ай бұрын
Actress Lucille Ball picked up radio transmissions on her fillings that led to the capture of Japanese spies in California in 1942.
@Bettinasisrg27 күн бұрын
I'm just happy that there are smart people out there who are keeping track of this stuff outside our closed government! I for one would want to know if something major was afoot. So thank you !
@100pyatt5 ай бұрын
Often used to determine shortwave radio conditions to various parts of the world during certain times of the day as well ....
@JimmyPeaTV5 ай бұрын
Hey my good man. Not sure what's going on, but I'm not receiving notifications of when you post, and I'm subbed to all your channels. Anyone else having/had this problem? 🤔 I live on the English coast, the closest point to the French coast. Growing up, we had some serious wacky signals and this is something that's always fascinated me. There's a great channel called Ringway Manchester that give some great content on Number Stations etc. Great content as usual 👍
@janemiettinen51765 ай бұрын
You woke up distant memory in me. Im a Finn from Helsinki, Estonia and Tallinn is situated right behind Baltic on the South, pretty much just like you and France. My grandpa worked his whole life in radio (Yleisradio, our BBC) as technician or mechanic in the link tower, and loved both tv & radio deeply, in all forms. He had the first Beta-video I ever saw, later he bought VHS too and used both daily. He set his tv to catch Soviet era Estonian tv, he even learned some Estonian from it, but he also tinkered with radios. This is very faint memory, I must’ve been really small (prob 1980ish), but Im sure he phoned to one of his radio enthusiast buddies and said he heard something weird, coming from Estonia. There was a sense of urgency or discovery, unusual or weird things were going on. I wanna say he gave the “coordinates” (frequency?, no idea what they are called) over phone and told the other guy to check it out, almost like “can you hear it too?”, but this part Im not as sure. I only remember sitting on the kitchen floor with my puzzle and the slight worry, surprise or excitement in his voice. What a weird, long buried memory decided to surface, thanks to your post! Now Im left wondering was he just really super into all things transmitting or was my mild mannered and stoic gramps possibly a spy :)
@JimmyPeaTV5 ай бұрын
@@janemiettinen5176 Either way, that is a fascinating story and a great read. Get researching, Ringway has covered lots of different places. My Son Mika was named after a great flying Finn. Thanks for sharing 🙏
@Thedeputypease5 ай бұрын
Dude that helmet looks rad no pun intended
@DixieDaydreamer3 ай бұрын
The band Porcupine Tree uses a sample of number stations at the end of the track "Even Less", the writer Steve Wilson says there's something "spooky" about messages flying around us we cannot understand, it's so futile to think these could be coded messages to assinate someone or just a shopping list of supplies to be collected from an army store, who knows, they have a rhythm and an almost hypnotic trance like effect if you listen to them for too long.
@ProfessorToadstool4 ай бұрын
my cats react to the intro, looking around before coming to sit nearby...
@johngancarcik56823 ай бұрын
They know good content
@mojavepatrol47672 ай бұрын
I've actually heard the Cuban lady very late at night in the middle of the Mojave desert on my AN/GRR-5....
@anthonychilders95495 ай бұрын
Fun fact! The opening for Radio Pyongyang is called "Where are you, Dear General?"
@ejneisler12825 ай бұрын
Dude. I LOVE THE RADIO TRANSMISSION VIDEOS ❤. When I originally found this channel, this was what captured me!
@thurlravenscroft25724 ай бұрын
Love that picture of the PLZT Goggle on the thumbnail.
@TJV835 ай бұрын
Where can I find a radio good enough to listen to these??
@hxhdfjifzirstc8945 ай бұрын
Radio Shack
@michaelmarquejr48245 ай бұрын
It's on shortwave radio
@neetintel2 ай бұрын
There was a more recent SKYKING message broadcast than the one you included in this video. It was broadcast on April 12 and I posted it to my channel a few days later.
@johnphilipfosterdobson5515 ай бұрын
I use to have fun with my dad's national radio that had 4 short wave bands. Usually late at night NZ time I'd plug in our tv aerial and grab a beer slowly go through the bands. I'd mainly pick up morse code, but I'd get some soviet code with female voices. Great fun after a late night at work.
@Handles_are_good_for_holding5 ай бұрын
13 missed calls from dad.
@johngancarcik56823 ай бұрын
Or 1 missed call from mom
@barrybrevik91785 ай бұрын
This is a great video with an interesting topic! I mean, all of your videos are interesting, but this one inspired me to leave a comment. That is all.
@ghostlylover991235 ай бұрын
Ah yes, the "where are you dear general" song
@MizuMing5 ай бұрын
3rd broadcast made my body feel fuzzy. 👀
@MatthewGill-nv4tb5 ай бұрын
Listening to some of them. They seem like they're using an open line to send info for syncing a radio to a secret line. Military radios have to be synced together to communicate. Edit: i think im actually on to something. We would use a device called an ANCD. They required a certain code to be put in and it reminds me a lot of what theyre saying with the numbers stations
@Lanwarder5 ай бұрын
In the 90's I was listening to the radio and it was interrupted by a guy with a weird voice reading number in spanish: Uno Dos Tres Quatro Cinqo Cinqo Seis
@RB20ANDY5 ай бұрын
Was he pretty fly?
@AlKaseltzer875 ай бұрын
@RB20ANDY I bet he was really a white guy.
@chada755 ай бұрын
Heard the same code and wondered if he got a 13 Tattoo or 31?
@hxhdfjifzirstc8945 ай бұрын
Wooly Booly?
@janemiettinen51765 ай бұрын
Oh yeah, I heard it too, what a coincidence! Gunter glieben glauchen globen, give it to me baby..
@milesteg81835 ай бұрын
Came here for the Bleep blorp diddle diddle diddle. Was not disappointed.
@Magnify6155 ай бұрын
KZbin unsubscribed me from your channel. I was actually walking through the sixth-floor museum in Dallas when you released the Kennedy video. You must have gotten a bit too close to the sun. Which part do you think got it nerfed, was it the babushka lady or the umbrella man, neither of which was mentioned in the museum. There was also a man outside of the museum with an enhanced image of mussel flashes coming from the grassy knoll, a video that has never circulated on the internet.
@sdingeswho5 ай бұрын
Anything out of Cuba gives me pause - that’s a very dedicated, well-entrenched regime, always up to no good, which is why people continue to risk their lives to escape from it.
@milesnixon9554Ай бұрын
I'm fond of the cheery sinister quality on "The Lincolnshire Poacher" myself.
@barnoidbatno360728 күн бұрын
I remember listening to the number stations as a kid on my home made radio. Never knew what they were about but always fascinated me.
@deathstrike5 ай бұрын
There was a rumor as far back as the late 90s that amateur enthusiasts were actively seeking to use some of the older, barely functional communications satellites like the old Inmarsat (British) and a few others for long range amateur communications. It was also speculated that the "zombie satellites" are often tapped for their functioning components as stages for test signals and other non secure communications. Also as emergency backups for satellites with failing X and Ku band transmitters. This is usually older satellite communications, as more modern satellites and antennas receive the stronger S Band. Also, there are a few zombie Iridium Satellites that Motorola lost communications with that are "spewing" as well.
@markchamberlain98565 ай бұрын
No choice here- they’re all creepy. Thanks again for the great posts!
@leoschneider357019 күн бұрын
I’ve always been really into radio communications. But I have always been kind of terrified of it at the same time
@MattHudz5 ай бұрын
Can't beat a number stations vid...
@medicbabe2ID5 ай бұрын
Especially one from Dark5
@sdingeswho5 ай бұрын
I don’t know if it’s the creepiest, but the ones from SkyKing potentially have the broadest implications, even though it’s “ours”. Clearly communicates with deep-cover operatives, hence the “do not respond” warning. SkyKing is only heard because we *want* it to be heard - there are much better ways of communicating clandestine information - highly encrypted burst transmissions, etc.
@JT-vo1yh5 ай бұрын
Does anyone know what model of handheld receiver that is at 9:35 - 9:40?
@JT-vo1yh5 ай бұрын
I think I found it: ATS200.
@stephenhill17165 ай бұрын
I had a friend many years ago who was into the HAM radio stuff. I’m starting to get into myself but…we were at his house one day messing with the equipment and something popped on there with a series of numbers, codes and tones. He literally went pale, turned off the equipment and never spoke of it again. He moved to Utah or something a few years ago. Haven’t heard from him since.
@bryanwheeler16083 ай бұрын
Such things have been around for years, hardly a cause for "moving to Utah!"
@roviwoteap23753 ай бұрын
Maybe the message was meant for him? Spooky 😮
@uniknight10405 ай бұрын
Old sky king messages have been decrypted. There’s a discord and open source community that dedicates their efforts to monitoring these messages.
@BZizzle5 ай бұрын
"Which of these broadcasts do you find to be the most creepy?" Me: none of them.
@stonecutter25 ай бұрын
Okay, whoa, because I stumbled on one of these randomly while playing with a hand crank international radio I bought for storm/weather info (it has two weather channel features too). And i was scrolling across stations, and heard THIS. The woman, the spanish numbers, the tones.
@Elivagar875 ай бұрын
How are people hunting for these stations? Ham radio? Gmrs? I’ve been wanting to hunt on my own but not sure what’s needed or where to even begin
@bryanwheeler16083 ай бұрын
The ones mentioned are on diverse frequencies, but many people specialise, & may use a common HF (shortwave) Communications receiver, or a cheap SDR Radio Dongle on their computer.
@linokuma65595 ай бұрын
good to see you again buddy :')
5 ай бұрын
Broadcasting static silence....
@marcelineheartfield31675 ай бұрын
Actually got a taped recording of hmo1 it's neat to see it's still running. In southern Wisconsin you can pick it up around 4pm with a consumer grade shortwave radio receiver
@iHaveTheDocuments5 ай бұрын
In before they change the thumbnail from a star wars looking mask to something like a plane
@13thCP3 ай бұрын
The V15 station with that haunting music made the hair stand up on my neck.
@ventura155 ай бұрын
Bro u just got a new subscriber!
@Kit_Bear4 ай бұрын
The Cuban broadcast was indeed a One Time Pad encrypted broadcast. I am very familiar with it. it was also used in the movie "Toy Soldiers". It's unbreakable.
@henrykrinkle82865 ай бұрын
as always great and entertaining content
@USNavyVet_STG5 ай бұрын
BTW, we also have underwater communications techniques that are employed daily. Rest assured.
@sdingeswho5 ай бұрын
Correct - ULF for communicating with submarines 😎👍.
@InvisibleCitizen3 күн бұрын
Most Americans don’t know that there are special operations teams stationed all around this country. They walk amount us but are extremely well trained and ready at a moments notice! All of you should ask yourself why! Their mission is not necessarily benevolent!
@matthewtmarfield78615 ай бұрын
Back in the mid '70s, when I was in my early 'teens, I did a lot of Short-wave listening. I recall logging Hispanic Numeric Sequences. I no longer have my logbook, but I believe that the transmission was between 7mhz and 14mhz. I presumed that bait was some manner of Spy Broadcast, and I believe that an issue of "Popular Electronics" mentioned these broadcasts.
@bradleyswaney61005 ай бұрын
Great video ❤
@markjoyce31722 ай бұрын
I love your work. Thank you
@Quansem5 ай бұрын
We're all very curious: what AI prompt did you use to generate that thumbnail?
@nommadd57585 ай бұрын
Nothing the ccp does is "harmless" or 'inadvertent'.