Uncovering the Knowledge They Tried to Erase
A six-chapter investigation into the U.S. Invention Secrecy Act — the federal law that seals patents, silences inventors, and suppresses breakthrough technologies for decades. Built from declassified records, federal court filings, and primary-source data.
Breaking Silence investigates how transformative technological knowledge can be suppressed under the authority of national security — often without public oversight, accountability, or meaningful remedy for those affected.
It begins with a real patent sealed by the U.S. government in 2009, and expands outward to document a system built through Cold War doctrine, federal statute, and classified operational policy.
How Knowledge Is Shaped Before It Reaches You
Volume 1 documented suppression with authors — a statute, a secrecy order, a case number. Volume 2 asks a harder question: what happens when suppression has no author?
"The most dangerous suppressors are the ones that cannot be named — not because they hide, but because they emerge from systems we designed for other purposes entirely."
— Breaking Silence, Volume 2
Algorithmic Suppression Theory — when optimization systems produce silence as an emergent outcome.
What education does not teach — and the structural decisions that made those subjects disappear.
Three more domains. One argument. Five structural principles for building systems that cannot suppress.
Volume 2 — Currently in Development
Subscribe for Updates →Sixteen pages. Court rulings. Statutory authority. Verified patent records. The legal and institutional foundations of invention secrecy — documented with primary sources.
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