Did a cat gain control of the U.S. Strategic Command Twitter account or has someone inadvertently released the launch code for a nuclear weapon?
The command, at 8:48 a.m. Monday, tweeted the sequence “;l;;gmlxzssaw.”
The unusual message had received more than 12,000 likes, 9,000 retweets, and hundreds of comments less than an hour after it was posted.
Now go to this popular cryptogram solver:
http://rumkin.com/tools/cipher/cryptogram-solver.php 237
Put in the cipher: ;l;;gmlxzssaw
One purported result: Q acquitted
https://www.disclose.tv/t/unusual-tweet-by-u-s-strategic-command-l-gmlxzssaw/27492
Gab says Lin Wood to run for South Carolina GOP chair (The Hill).
https://gab.com/thebias_news/posts/105972616412999897
Put in the cipher: ;l;;gmlxzssaw
One purported result: Q acquitted
That makes no sense at all to me. I was a big cryptogram puzzle fan as a youngster. This alleged “cipher” has 13 characters, while the purported results at the site (including “Q acquitted”) all have only 10, or 11 if you count the space. How is this possible?
I think the cat did it!