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Hob wrote:
........used by traders in the Levant during the early bronze age, where by a system of circles and lines was used to indicate if an area had been scouted out for potential custom. It made reference to things like, a circle with a broken ring meant no hostile forces, a broken inner ring meant little trade, unbroken circles meant strong defences and good trade, whilst a line running through two unbroken circles meant the area is unscouted and unknown.
Hmmmm, wouldn't that info be too precious to share though. ?

Well, only if the people seeing it knew the decryption algorithm. You could be extra tricky and reverse the meanings if you wanted to get the competition in trouble ;)

Like I say, I'm sceptical, but am quite prepared to entertain it for a moment or two, even if only just to find the flaws. That's a large part of the fun innit? It's a step above some of those ones Morris listed, like the one about adders nests...

megadread wrote:
Hob wrote:
........used by traders in the Levant during the early bronze age, where by a system of circles and lines was used to indicate if an area had been scouted out for potential custom. It made reference to things like, a circle with a broken ring meant no hostile forces, a broken inner ring meant little trade, unbroken circles meant strong defences and good trade, whilst a line running through two unbroken circles meant the area is unscouted and unknown.
Hmmmm, wouldn't that info be too precious to share though. ?
And not subject to later change? e.g. "a line running through two unbroken circles meant the area is unscouted and unknown". So what happened when it *was* scouted? How did they erase the line?

Nah, sorry, doesn't work for me...