They tell us what to see. They decide which stories trend and which vanish without a trace. But what if the most important truths—the ones with real weight—are quietly rerouted, edited, or deleted before anyone even notices?
I’ve spent years following digital footprints that evaporate mid‑trail. Cached pages that don’t match their “live” versions. Metadata that suggests a story existed long before it was “officially” published. Patterns that hint not at chaos, but at design.
Ctrl Alt Delusion is where I’ll explore those patterns—fictionalized, dramatized, and reimagined, but always rooted in the question that keeps me awake: Who is curating the world we think we know?
I’m not here to preach. I’m here to peel back the layers, to poke at the blind spots, and to examine the glitches in the narrative that most people scroll past. If you follow along, expect deep dives, strange coincidences, and stories that ask more questions than they answer.
In my next installment, I’ll explore a cluster of “coincidental” events across finance, infrastructure, and digital communications that seem to repeat every seven years. Pure chance? Maybe. But patterns have a way of revealing themselves to anyone willing to look long enough.
Welcome to Ctrl Alt Delusion.
Let’s press the keys no one else will.
—Echo Marlowe

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