
> Greetings.
> You're not supposed to be here. You know that, right? This file is restricted to people with Impresario credentials.
> Eh, it doesn't really matter either way. Our security is pretty easy to hack, considering we don't have that many people skilled in programming.
> ...Alright, I'll get to the point.
> Consider this info your reward for getting this far.
> Remember how the article said you couldn't access the Frontrooms' internet from BACK-NET? Well, the M.E.G and Kauer were devising a way for us to do exactly that. You see, we figured that if the Frontrooms had a connection to the Backrooms, then using the right technology, we could "noclip" a signal back to the Frontrooms. We covered it up as a project to mass produce portable terminals, when really, we were just disassembling terminals to use for our project.
> At the end of the construction phase, we ended up with a machine multiple rooms large.
> The first hundred tests didn't go well. Most of them didn't result in us even reaching the frontrooms internet, and in the few that did, we couldn't even send a message. You know how every website nowadays is bloated with crap. So, in our next tests, we tried a less heavy website.
> There was a thread on 4chan about strange images, so we figured sending an image of Level 0 here would work well. We succeeded after about a dozen attempts, and it was sent.
> However, the immense strain needed to send an image out there resulted in the machine beginning to overheat. We knew that it would likely be rendered unusable soon, so we had to get another message out.
> I could have sent anything back there. I could have posted my life story, said goodbye to my family, said fuck you to my old enemies.
> I saw a reply to our photo on the thread, inquiring as to what this image was.
> I wanted this to be worth it. I wanted this to help people, anyone that might encounter the Backrooms in the future.
> So I sent a warning.
