Use of nuclear waste to create safe digital waves

The developers of the Black digital waves used radioactive waste from a Soviet nuclear power plant in Chernobyl, Ukraine, to create a secure digital currency system. Ryan Pierce and Andrew Miller used radioactive graphs taken from a country where a major nuclear disaster occurred in 1986 to produce gamma radiation [...]
Ryan Pierce and Andrew Miller used radioactive graphs taken from a country where a major nuclear disaster occurred in 1986 to produce gamma radiation and low - intensity beta.
This radiation was used to generate random numbers that would be used to create Zke's cryptographic parameters.
The entire “activity was carried out during a flight on a small private plane, which, for security reasons, flew to an altitude of about 1,000 meters above the American states of Illinois and Wisconsin. They wanted to be absolutely sure that the code used to create Zkesh would not be “broke” in any way.
Black is currently in position 26 for the value of digital currency.












