As of 3 January 2018, LEIs are mandatory for all companies who wish to continue trading in securities.

The silence of his apartment was absolute, until the heavy, rhythmic thud of a fist hit the wood of his front door. He froze. The torrent client was still open, the "Upload" speed suddenly spiking to impossible numbers.

17:02:45 — Elias hears a knock at the door. He does not answer. This is a mistake. Elias looked at the clock on his taskbar. It was 17:02:40. 42.

He wasn't just downloading a file anymore; he was being uploaded.

He clicked it. The notepad window flickered, then stabilized. It didn't contain instructions. It contained a live-streamed log of his own keystrokes from five minutes ago, followed by a single line of text that hadn't happened yet:

Elias watched the peer list. One solitary seeder, located somewhere in Svalbard, was feeding him bytes at a glacial pace. He’d heard the stories—that anyone who finished the download was visited by "system administrators" who weren't entirely human. He’d dismissed them as creepypasta, the kind of digital folklore that grows in the dark corners of the web. The progress bar turned green. Download Complete.

He didn't hesitate. He opened the directory. Inside wasn't a simulation, or a video, or even code. There was a single text file named README_BEFORE_OPENING.txt .