Eris worked the graveyard shift for the National Digital Preservation Institute, sifting through automated satellite dumps from decommissioned Korean communication relays. Most of it was static, ghost signals from dead satellites, or corrupted fragments of old K-pop broadcasts. But this one was different.
A lonely video archivist decodes a fragmented satellite feed dated August 6, 2024, only to discover it contains a message from her future self, recorded on May 28th in a place called Penbang. The file landed in Eris Cho’s queue at 3:17 AM.
“Someone who deleted it the first time,” the man said. “On August 6th, 2024. We thought we fixed the loop. But you just reopened it.”
Eris worked the graveyard shift for the National Digital Preservation Institute, sifting through automated satellite dumps from decommissioned Korean communication relays. Most of it was static, ghost signals from dead satellites, or corrupted fragments of old K-pop broadcasts. But this one was different.
A lonely video archivist decodes a fragmented satellite feed dated August 6, 2024, only to discover it contains a message from her future self, recorded on May 28th in a place called Penbang. The file landed in Eris Cho’s queue at 3:17 AM. Video Title- KA24080630-baeyeonseo5wol28ilpaenbang
“Someone who deleted it the first time,” the man said. “On August 6th, 2024. We thought we fixed the loop. But you just reopened it.” Eris worked the graveyard shift for the National