Pivoting Scribbler's AI Psychosis
Gave myself an outlet for AI tool explorations. A website home for multi-layered, recursive disclosure narrative.
I’m a screen scribbler. I write TV shows, movies and video games.
All these things that I’ve worked on sit somewhere around the tech, intelligence, military, scientific systems; that kind of stuff has always been part of my specialty.
Over the years, that put me in some very cool rooms with people who actually work in those spaces. I’ve worked with CIA people and military people, been to NORAD and Space Command, made connections over the years with very interesting people in that community.
A few years back, I got a weird email through a secondary Signal account that I use for anonymous tips and such when I’m doing research. This message didn’t have any identifying info, but referenced some of my work and suggested whoever was sending it knew some of the people that I did.
The source claimed that they were part of a program connected to CERN, which is that crazy Hadron Super Collider in Switzerland. The way they described their work wasn’t something I knew about.
They were using quantum states and tech to tap into space-time, but not for time travel. It was more about resolving probabilities and grabbing usable data out of that, like hacking future information streams, is sort of how I wrap my head around it.
I figured this was a prank or AI spam, so I didn’t respond. A few months later I got another email, and this one had an attachment.
The files were weird; all kinds of different formats, and some I could access using like Winrar and just sort of unzipping and using steganography to unpack what was buried in some images.
It referenced events and organizations and timelines from 2060, essentially into 2105, and other events that hadn’t happened yet.
There wasn’t a pitch; I thought maybe someone was trying to sell me on something or convince me of something I had no idea about.
The more I looked at it, the more I wondered: was this stuff real? Was it fake? I started seeing patterns across the fragments that connected and made assumptions about future conflicts and logistics, seeing failure repeating with grounded variation and sometimes contradicting each other, with all these weird gaps.
My first instinct was reconstruct it, so I ran chunks through Claude and ChatGPT to get it organized, but that didn’t help. The outputs were clean, but flattened, and almost felt even more bogus.
I was thinking that disclosing this in a traditional way wouldn’t make any sense and would just make me look like an insane person.
I thought, well, why don’t I just start messing around with it like a game?
I’ve done some narrative design, but it’s not my core domain of expertise. So, I brought AI back in to help me build game systems: dice and thresholds and modifiers, to play through future events.
It has to be a hoax, this whole thing, maybe it is, maybe it isn’t. I have no idea; there’s cool stuff here, but either way, I get to play with it, and now — you can too.
If I get more messages from the source, I’ll update the material, for whatever that’s worth.
Real? Fake? No idea. Either way, it’s the kind of stuff I’m into.
I hope you take this madness in the spirit with which it’s being shared. Have a look at your own peril, or click away.
ABS
Always. Be. Scribbling.
J


