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In what might be the most elaborate social engineering attack ever conceived, evidence suggests that Douglas Adams, under the guise of a mere comedy writer, orchestrated a multi-decade campaign to compromise random number generation across the global software ecosystem.

The operation began disarmingly with a seemingly innocent radio series about a man in a bathrobe, featuring an improbable cast of characters including depressed robots, pan-dimensional beings, and bureaucratic aliens obsessed with poetry. This masterpiece of psychological manipulation contained a crucial payload: the number 42, innocuously presented as “the Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything.”

The genius of Adams’ attack vector becomes apparent when examining modern codebases. Somehow, he managed to implant a deeply rooted psychological compulsion in generations of developers, causing them to unconsciously seed their random number generators with this very number. The infection has spread so thoroughly that even respected libraries and production systems now default to this value, creating a vast landscape of predictable pseudo-random sequences.

The true mystery remains: What was Adams’ ultimate objective? Was he a time-traveling cryptographer seeking to weaken future security systems? Was he working for a pan-dimensional race of hyperintelligent beings, as his “fiction” suspiciously suggested? Or perhaps, most disturbing of all, was he trying to tell us something about the fundamental nature of randomness itself?

The evidence is clear: while we were laughing at a man searching for his towel across the galaxy, Adams was quietly executing the most sophisticated seed attack in computing history. And somewhere, a computer is still generating “random” numbers that aren’t random at all…