We’re excited to announce the release of Atlantis Scan Upload 1.11 — a major step forward in how teams ingest, process, and analyze unstructured data.
Whether you’re dealing with legacy document dumps, scanned PDFs, or multi-layered image files, version 1.11 introduces a more intelligent, resilient upload-to-insight pipeline.
The keyword first appeared on a now-deleted Pastebin file on November 1st, 2023 (hence the "1.11" versioning, presumed to mean "November 1st, 2023, v1.1"). The anonymous poster, using the handle Deep_Blue_Requiem, wrote only two lines: atlantis scan upload 1.11
"Not all myths are memory. Some are blueprints. Download within 72 hours. Atlantis Scan Upload 1.11 – side-scan sonar + magnetometry. Coordinates embedded."
The link led to an Onion site (a dark web address) hosting a single compressed 4.2 GB file. The filename was ATL_SSS_MAG_1.11.tar.gz. Within 48 hours, the file was mirrored across BitTorrent, Usenet, and private Discord servers before the original onion went offline. We’re excited to announce the release of Atlantis
So, what is inside version 1.11? Independent digital forensic analysts who have examined the file (and agreed to speak anonymously) describe three core components:
The controversy began when an anonymous user on a deep-sea exploration forum claimed that raw data from Upload 1.11 contained “organized rectilinear structures” at a depth of 1,200 meters, in a region previously mapped only with low-resolution satellite altimetry. "Not all myths are memory
According to the leaked metadata:
Critically, the upload included three data layers:
Layer 3 showed a localized magnetic dipole consistent with large quantities of basaltic rock arranged in non-geological patterns—or, more provocatively, with worked stone containing magnetic minerals.