You know you are a great inventor when you died unexpectly. That's right. It's a sign you are on to something which somebody considers you such a threat that they must eliminate their competition. Meet such an inventor, Rory Johnson. Rory Johnson created a cold-fusion, laser-activated, magnetic motor that produced 525 horsepower that would power a large bus 160,000 km on about 5 kgs of deuterium and gallium. Greyhound bus lines had entered into a deal with him to receive such a motor for their fleet of buses. Greyhound tried to contact him after a year of silence only to find out that he had died unexpectedly. This is odd since he had been in his early fifties and in robust health. It's very interesting that the U.S. Department of Energy had placed a restraining order on Johnson's company, Magnatron, Inc., prohibiting it from producing the Magnatron engine. Who figures? The government is protecting the Big Oil cartel? What about all the talk about green energy and supporting technological innovations? Guess they don't want the petro dollar to collapse with free energy making the need to have US dollars to buy oil unnecessary.
Remember if you are a free enegry inventor, keep a very low profile otherwise you might end up under the bus.
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Do not keep a low profile, keep a NO profile.
The other option is completely publish your findings on the blockchain.
Completely open source.
Nothing in between.
The most gigantic problem for inventors is, which do you do? You can spend hours trying to explain how something works to a bunch of people that still think the earth is a ball, or you could work on your inventions.
Too bad there aren't people out there that take engineering, not to be engineers but how to talking to engineers, and then explain it to the rest of the world. Our current technical writers aren't very good, and are in short supply.
Yes good point about get the word out there to the engineering professionals. I belive social media is the way to go to spread existing findings of dead inventors. But with alive inventors that's more tricky. Your blockchain findings sharing is intriguing.
Keep a low profile, release it all open source.
Excellent idea. With 3D metalic ink printers, one day soon you may be able to print your free energy device based on the open source diagrams.
And most people just don't want to know.
I'm not sure it is possible to hide. I think I read ages ago on Bearden's site that tapping into zero-point energy emits a signal that can be tracked. Similar to having a large faraday cage - you can hide what may be inside but you can't hide that you have the cage.