
The mystery message: 40 years and counting...
A Soviet-era signal has been buzzing for over 40 years. Some say it's a nuclear trigger. Others say aliens.
No one knows who's behind it.At 4625 kHz, a dull mechanical buzz echoes endlessly - day and night, winter and summer, across borders and decades. The sound is steady, almost hypnotic. Sometimes it falters. A brief pause. Then a voice emerges through the static:
"I am 143. Not receiving any response."Then - silence. And the buzz resumes.
No one has officially claimed responsibility for the transmission. There are no station identifications, no explanations, and no confirmed purpose.
But it's been broadcasting, almost without interruption, since the late 1970s. Radio enthusiasts around the world call it 'The Buzzer'.Over the years, the signal has inspired a growing mythology. Some believe it's part of a Soviet-era dead man's switch - a last-resort nuclear system designed to retaliate automatically if Russia's leadership is wiped out. Others think it might be a tool for communicating with spies, or perhaps even extraterrestrials.
Theories range from the plausible to the absurd.Echoes from the DeepLike all good Cold War mysteries, its real power lies not in what we know -
but in what we don't.Like the Kola Superdeep Borehole - the real Soviet drilling project that inspired urban legends about 'sounds from hell' -
The Buzzer lives in that fertile twilight between fact and fiction, secrecy and speculation.
Comment: Something out of nothing - or - nothing out of something? It is still 'there' and operational.