Glitch in the Code? Viral Entropy May Be the Next Clue We’re Simulated

 

What if the key to unlocking the biggest mystery of existence isn’t found in the stars—but in a virus?

A new report gaining traction on Yahoo News presents a compelling argument from physicist Melvin Vopson, who suggests that we may be living in a programmed reality—and that entropy in viral genomes may be the smoking gun. According to Vopson, the measurable information loss within the genetic code of viruses might not just be biological noise… but a data footprint of something much bigger.

Simulation theory has long been dismissed as fringe philosophy. But this isn’t abstract speculation—it’s thermodynamics. If a computer is running our universe, it has limits. Entropy—the gradual loss of information and structure—isn’t just a side effect of life; it might be a system constraint.

In a controlled simulation, preserving energy and minimizing data overload would be essential. Now consider this: virus genomes show a peculiar pattern of entropy, as if something—or someone—is trimming the data flow to keep the program efficient. Vopson argues that this pattern might be consistent with the kind of data compression you'd expect in a digital environment running at scale.

Suddenly, viral mutation isn’t just an evolutionary tactic—it’s a possible code optimization.

This changes the simulation debate. It’s no longer a question of belief. It’s a question of measurable, traceable digital fingerprints buried inside organic life.

Ready to follow the data trail?

🧬 Full article here:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/physicist-identifies-clue-may-living-113000831.html

— Strike Force News

(The glitch isn’t coming. It’s already written in the code.)

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