logo
Bottle With Mysterious Message Washes Up on Island, Sparks Wild Theories

Bottle With Mysterious Message Washes Up on Island, Sparks Wild Theories

Newsweek27-07-2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
A message in a bottle discovered off the coast of a remote island in Western Ireland has captured viral attention after being shared on Reddit.
The note, handwritten in Indonesian and partially in English and Chinese, appears to be a desperate SOS. It is believed to read: "Please send help. We are lost since 12/20. There are 3 of us here. We don't know the name of this island. We are injured."
It ends with the phrases, "HELP," "HELLO," "SOS," a Chinese character (李), and what appears to be a name or ship designation: "Yong Yu Sing 18."
Reddit user Matthew posted the discovery under the title, 'Message in a Bottle,' after finding the note in a wax-sealed bottle on the coast of Inis Oírr, part of the Aran Islands off Ireland's west coast.
"Me and my friend found this message in a bottle washed up in a rock pool on the coast of Inis Oírr Island in the Aran Islands, Ireland," Matthew wrote in a post that now has thousands of upvotes and hundreds of comments.
"We took some photos before we brought it back to the bar, where another friend smashed the bottle to get the note out," Matthew, who didn't give a surname, told Newsweek. "We used Google Translate, and the first half of the message translated to the SOS message. The lower text did not translate."
Police officers in Galway told Newsweek: "An Garda Síochána does not comment on third-party material posted online. Gardaí in Co Galway received a report of an item found at Inis Oírr, Aran Islands, at approximately 4 p.m. on 19th of July 2025. No offenses were disclosed."
From left: A person holds the bottle found in the west coast of Ireland, and the message inside is displayed.
From left: A person holds the bottle found in the west coast of Ireland, and the message inside is displayed.
Almym/Reddit
"My Gut Tells Me It's a Hoax"
After sharing the pictures of the note and bottle online, Reddit users sprang into action.
One user recognized the name "Yong Yu Sing 18" not as a person, but as a vessel.
Reddit users quickly traced the name to the Yong Yu Sing No. 18, a Taiwanese tuna long-liner that vanished in December 2020. A Taiwan News report, published in early January 2021, said the vessel was last heard from on December 30 that year. Days later, the U.S. Coast Guard spotted it adrift, damaged and empty, in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, over 600 nautical miles [690 miles] northeast of Midway Atoll.
There were no signs of the Taiwanese captain surnamed Li or his nine Indonesian crew members. The ship's lifeboat was missing, and its cabin windows were shattered.
"My gut tells me it's a hoax," Matthew said, "but Reddit has made me think, 'Just maybe.'"
In the comments, people were stunned. "Imagine this is real," wrote one user. "These three men are on an island all by themselves, no idea where they are, and this is their best hope. It's been four years."
Others offered practical advice. One commenter said: "I would contact the police or Coast Guard, if this is real, you could help save lives."
Despite thinking the note is likely a hoax, Matthew and his friend handed it to the police in nearby Galway. "They will let us know if anything interesting comes of it," he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meta bans millions of WhatsApp accounts linked to scam operations
Meta bans millions of WhatsApp accounts linked to scam operations

The Hill

timean hour ago

  • The Hill

Meta bans millions of WhatsApp accounts linked to scam operations

Meta took down 6.8 million WhatsApp accounts tied to scam operations on Tuesday after victims reported financial fraud schemes. The company said many of the scam sources were based in Southeast Asia at criminal scam centers. 'Based on our investigative insights into the latest enforcement efforts, we proactively detected and took down accounts before scam centers were able to operationalize them,' Meta said in a Tuesday release. 'These scam centers typically run many scam campaigns at once — from cryptocurrency investments to pyramid schemes. There is always a catch and it should be a red flag for everyone: you have to pay upfront to get promised returns or earnings,' they wrote. In an effort to ensure users are protected, the company said it would flag when people were added to group messages by someone who isn't in their contact list and urge individuals to pause before engaging with unfamiliar messages where they're encouraged to communicate on other social platforms. 'Scams may start with a text message or on a dating app, then move to social media, private messaging apps and ultimately payment or crypto platforms,' Meta said. 'In the course of just one scam, they often try to cycle people through many different platforms to ensure that any one service has only a limited view into the entire scam, making it more challenging to detect,' the company added. The Tuesday release highlighted an incident with Cambodian users urging people to enlist in a rent a scooter pyramid scheme with an initial text message generated by ChatGPT. The message contained a link to a WhatsApp chat which redirected the target to Telegram where they were told to like TikTok videos. 'We banned ChatGPT accounts that were generating short recruitment-style messages in English, Spanish, Swahili, Kinyarwanda, German, and Haitian Creole. These messages offered recipients high salaries for trivial tasks — such as liking social media posts — and encouraged them to recruit others,' OpenAI wrote in their June report focused on disrupting malicious artificial intelligence efforts. 'The operation appeared highly centralized and likely originated from Cambodia. Using AI-powered translation tools, we were able to investigate and disrupt the campaign's use of OpenAI services swiftly,' the company added. The Federal Trade Commission has reported a steady increase in social media fraud. The agency said more money was reported lost to fraud originating on social media than any other method of contact from January 2021 to June 2023 — with losses totaling $2.7 billion.

Army Soldier In Texas Accused of Trying to Spy for Russia
Army Soldier In Texas Accused of Trying to Spy for Russia

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Army Soldier In Texas Accused of Trying to Spy for Russia

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. An active-duty soldier stationed at Fort Bliss was arrested Wednesday in El Paso on charges of attempting to transmit national defense information to Russia and unlawfully export military technical data. According to federal prosecutors, 22-year-old Taylor Adam Lee — who held a top-secret security clearance — allegedly tried to share sensitive information on the U.S. Army's M1A2 Abrams tank with someone he believed represented the Russian government. He is accused of passing an SD card filled with controlled technical data and classified material during a July meeting, later delivering what appeared to be tank hardware and texting "Mission accomplished." Lee made his initial court appearance Wednesday. Officials say he could face serious federal penalties if convicted. This is a breaking new story. Updates to follow.

Two Chinese nationals in California accused of illegally shipping Nvidia AI chips to China
Two Chinese nationals in California accused of illegally shipping Nvidia AI chips to China

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Two Chinese nationals in California accused of illegally shipping Nvidia AI chips to China

By Karen Freifeld (Reuters) -Two Chinese nationals in California were arrested and charged with illegally shipping tens of millions of dollars' worth of AI chips to China, including Nvidia H100s, the U.S. Justice Department said on Tuesday. Chuan Geng, 28, of Pasadena, and Shiwei Yang, 28, of El Monte, exported the advanced Nvidia chips and other technology to China from October 2022 through July 2025 without the required licenses from the U.S. Commerce Department, the Justice Department said, citing an affidavit filed with the complaint. According to the affidavit, Geng and Yang's El Monte-based company, ALX Solutions, was founded in 2022, shortly after the U.S. imposed sweeping export controls on technology to China to slow Beijing's military modernization and began to require licenses for the chips. China opposed the U.S. move as harming normal trade. Over 20 shipments from ALX went to shipping and freight forwarding companies in Singapore and Malaysia, which are often used as transshipment points for illegal goods to China, a federal agent, who works for the Commerce Department, said in the affidavit. ALX received a $1 million payment from a China-based company in January 2024 and other payments from companies in Hong Kong and China, not from the freight forwarding companies, the agent said. Nvidia H100s are advanced chips that can be used to train large language models and many other applications. Records show that from at least August 2023 to July 2024, ALX Solutions bought over 200 Nvidia H100 chips from San Jose, California-based server maker Super Micro Computer, declaring that the customers were in Singapore and Japan, the agent said. On one 2023 invoice valued at $28,453,855, ALX said the customer was in Singapore, but a U.S. export control officer in Singapore could not verify the chips arrived in the country and the company did not exist at the listed location, the document says. "This case demonstrates that smuggling is a nonstarter," a Nvidia spokesperson said in a statement. "We primarily sell our products to well-known help us ensure that all sales comply with U.S. export control rules." Diverted products have "no service, support or updates," the statement added. Super Micro said in a statement it was "firmly committed to compliance with all U.S. export control regulations." It said it did not comment on ongoing legal matters, but cooperated with authorities in any such proceedings. Geng and Yang appeared in federal court in Los Angeles on Monday, the Justice Department said. Geng, a permanent resident, was released on $250,000 bond. Yang, who overstayed her visa, has a detention hearing on August 12. Lawyers for the defendants did not respond to requests for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store