Learn · Documentation
What is Nuclear?
How to Use It.
Complete informative guide about Nuclear — a sovereign, locally autonomous data-security platform engineered from first principles under the Web7 Highcryption protocol.
Brief information about nuclear with examples.
Nuclear is a sovereign, locally autonomous data-security platform engineered from first principles under the Web7 Highcryption protocol.
Unlike conventional encryption systems that rely on standardised cipher suites and centralised key-management infrastructures,
Nuclear implements a proprietary seven-layered highcryption architecture in which every individual byte of source data is subjected
to seven successive, cryptographically independent transformation stages -- substitution, permutation, and exclusive-disjunction --
each governed by its own freshly generated 256-bit random key, its own random substitution box, and its own random shuffle seed.
Because every mapping is stochastic and non-repeating, the same input plaintext will never produce the same ciphertext twice;
consequently, frequency analysis, pattern recognition, differential cryptanalysis, and all related statistical attack methodologies
are rendered structurally infeasible.
Nuclear operates at ninety-nine per cent offline capacity, executing the entirety of its cryptographic pipeline on the local device without
transmitting, caching, or mirroring any fragment of user data to external servers, cloud endpoints, or third-party intermediaries.
All records -- credentials, file metadata, transformation logs, subscription state, and device-binding fingerprints -- reside exclusively
within a single tamper-proof binary database file designated `scrap.dat`, which itself is stored under Web7 Highcryption with SHA-256
integrity verification. The software further enforces hardware-level device binding through its Harmonic Uniqtions (HU) system, a
composite fingerprinting mechanism that collects immutable hardware identifiers -- system UUID, motherboard serial number, BIOS serial,
CPU identifier, disk serial, and MAC addresses -- and computes a deterministic hash that permanently associates a Nuclear address with
its originating machine. This ensures that even if `scrap.dat` is physically copied to another device, it cannot be decrypted or accessed there.
The platform's operational philosophy is one of absolute user sovereignty: Nuclear neither adapts to nor depends upon the host
environment beyond raw computational resources. It performs millions to billions of cryptographic operations per second on behalf of
its operator, transforms files of virtually any format -- documents, images, video, audio, archives, executables, databases,
certificates, 3D models, and hundreds more -- into impenetrable `.nuc` Transformer packages, and provides a built-in peer-to-peer
transfer system called Nuclear Fusion for direct, real-time exchange of highcrypted payloads between Nuclear addresses over the public
internet. Version 1.0 (model designation GUX-NG26) has been released for unrestricted deployment across all seven continental regions,
with no territorial limitations on usage.
In summary, Nuclear is not merely an encryption tool; it is a self-contained, zero-trust, device-bound cryptographic
operating environment that places the totality of data control -- creation, transformation, storage, transfer, and destruction --
into the hands of a single operator, with no back doors, no master keys, no password-recovery mechanisms, and no external dependencies.
Following is openly released example of seven layered extremly random highcryption code for scrap.dat,
without decoding patterns. (for trigger reference, (& different each time)):
non-backend highcryption model
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The following narrative traces the complete first-time experience of a user named Alex, from the moment of installation through every major capability of the Nuclear Transformer application.
Every feature described below corresponds precisely to the functional architecture of Nuclear V1.0.
Alex downloads the Nuclear Transformer application and launches it for the first time. The Welcome screen appears, displaying the Nuclear emblem, the version designation (V1.0: GUX-NG26), and a tagline that reads *"Simple. Powerful. Highcrypted."* At the bottom of the screen, a footer states *"Extreme Web7 Highcryption, Personalized"* alongside a link to the official Nuclear site, where Statements, Policy documents, and the Research Paper are published.
In the top-left corner, Alex notices a small atomic icon. Curious, he clicks it, and the **Atomic Presentation** panel opens -- a comprehensive briefing on the fundamental principles of Nuclear. The panel explains that Nuclear is an end-to-end, random, extreme seven-layered highcryption system built in strict accordance with the Web7 protocol; that all data resides exclusively in `scrap.dat` and the local `files` folder on the user's device; that the software operates ninety-nine per cent offline in a fully autonomous, non-controllable mode; and that the user is the sole operator with complete authority over all functions. Alex also reads that he should verify his CPU core count for optimal performance, as Nuclear performs millions to billions of cryptographic operations per second. A small speaker icon in the panel allows Alex to listen to the entire Atomic Presentation read aloud in his selected language, a feature he appreciates for accessibility. He clicks the close button, and the panel collapses.
Alex also notices several status icons in the top-right area of the Welcome screen: a dark-mode toggle (which he clicks to switch the interface to a sleek dark theme), a network-status indicator (currently showing "Nuclear: Offline Mode" since no network-dependent operations are in progress), a CPU-core display, and a language picker. He clicks the language picker and is presented with a list of supported languages; he selects English and proceeds
Satisfied with his understanding of the platform, Alex clicks the prominent button labelled **"Create Nuclear Address"**.
The Address Creation screen loads, displaying the Nuclear title banner and a clean vertical form. Alex is required to fill in five fields:
1. **Username** -- Alex types `Alex_2026`.
2. **Passcode** -- Alex creates a strong, memorable passcode. He reads the on-screen instruction carefully: *"Your credentials, contact details, and Nuclear address are stored exclusively in scrap.dat (your virtual real estate) with Web7 Highcryption -- nowhere else. Your Passcode is required each time you unlock the software. If you lose your Passcode, all data will be permanently inaccessible."* Alex understands there is no password-recovery mechanism -- this is by design for maximum security.
3. **Redcode** -- Alex creates a separate emergency code. The screen warns him in detail: *"Your Redcode is an extreme emergency security protocol. Use it only when you feel genuinely unsafe or are facing a critical threat to your data. Once the Redcode is entered in the Passcode login field, Nuclear will initiate an irreversible goodbye page. During this lockdown, all access to your Nuclear software will be permanently suspended. Your scrap.dat and files will remain intact but completely inaccessible for the entire duration. Do not enter your Redcode casually or as a test -- this action cannot be undone."* Alex memorises his Redcode and stores it separately from his Passcode.
4. **Phone Number** -- Alex enters his personal phone number.
5. **Email** -- Alex enters his email address.
Below these fields, a sixth field displays a pre-generated **Nuclear Address** -- a unique 34-character lowercase alphabetic string (e.g., `qvmb.. & more`). Alex notices a small regenerate icon beside this field; he clicks it once to generate a fresh address, decides he is satisfied, and leaves it as is.
A speaker icon in the top-left corner of this page allows Alex to hear the credential-storage instructions read aloud. A reload icon in the opposite corner would clear all inputs if he wished to start over.
Alex clicks **"Done & Next"**. Behind the scenes, the application collects his device's hardware fingerprint through the Harmonic Uniqtions (HU) system -- gathering system UUID, motherboard serial, BIOS serial, CPU identifier, MAC addresses, disk serial, and other immutable identifiers -- and writes all of Alex's credentials, contact details, Nuclear address, and device fingerprint into a freshly created `scrap.dat` file in the `Documents/Nuclear` directory. This file is immediately highcrypted with the full seven-layer Web7 protocol and protected by a SHA-256 integrity hash. From this moment onward, Alex's Nuclear account is permanently bound to this specific device.
Alex is taken to the **Payment Page**, which displays the Nuclear title banner and the heading *"Complete Your 28-Day Subscription."* The page reads: *"Secure your access to Nuclear Web7 Highcryption Technology."* Below, it shows the subscription fee converted into Alex's local currency (the application auto-detects his country via IP geolocation and converts the base amount into the appropriate denomination using real-time exchange-rate APIs).
Alex clicks **"Pay & Activate Subscription."** A loading spinner appears with the message *"Processing payment... Please complete payment in your browser."* The application has generated a secure payment link via the Razorpay Payment Links API, which opens in Alex's default web browser. Alex completes the payment in the browser. Meanwhile, Nuclear polls the Razorpay API every five seconds in the background, checking the payment status. The moment the payment is confirmed as "paid," the loading spinner disappears and a success message appears: *"Payment successful! Your subscription has been activated."*
Behind the scenes, Nuclear records the payment confirmation in `scrap.dat` immediately -- even before navigating away from the payment screen -- ensuring that no successful payment can ever be lost, even if the application crashes. The subscription start time and end time (twenty-eight days from now) are written to the database.
After a brief pause, the application transitions to a **fifteen-second loading screen** displaying a rotating loader and the text *"Web7 Nuclear is Opening."* This loading period allows the system to initialise all internal modules, verify database integrity, and prepare the main interface.
The loading screen fades, and Alex arrives at the **Main Page** -- the operational heart of Nuclear. The interface is divided into a top bar and a tabbed workspace.
**The Top Bar** displays the following elements from left to right:
- **Nuclear Address**: Alex's full 34-character address is displayed prominently. Beside it are three action icons:
- A **copy icon** that copies his address to the clipboard with a single click.
- A **QR code icon** that opens a popup displaying a scannable QR code unique to Alex's Nuclear address and username. The QR encodes his address in the format `NUCLEAR:ADDRESS:USERNAME`. Alex can download this QR as a PNG image for identity verification.
- A **drive icon** that opens the **Basic Statements** panel -- an informational reference covering location-data handling, footprint security, Redcode protocol, and Fusion operating principles. Like the Atomic Presentation, this panel also features a text-to-speech option.
- **Subscription Counter**: Below the address, a line reads *"Unstoppable use to **28** days."* This counter decreases in real time. When three or fewer days remain, the text turns to a warning colour; at one day or fewer, it becomes critically highlighted.
- **Live Clock**: A real-time date and time display in the format *"03 April, 2026 | 12:08 PM"* updates every second.
On the right side of the top bar, Alex sees:
- A **Footprint icon** that, when clicked, collects and downloads a comprehensive Nuclear Footprint file containing all of Alex's identification and access data.
- A **Location icon** with a tooltip that displays Alex's current geographical location, determined in real time via IP geolocation. This data is processed locally and is neither stored externally nor transmitted to any third party.
- The **Dark Mode toggle**, **Network Status indicator**, **CPU Core display**, and **Language Picker** -- all familiar from the Welcome screen.
- A **Reload icon** to refresh the application and a **Shutdown button** to securely log out.
**The Info Box Animation**: Upon entering the main page, a sleek animated information bar slides up from the bottom of the screen. A folder icon glides from left to right while text types out progressively: *"{Documents/Nuclear: Connected} {Scrap.dat: Connected} {Files Folder: Aligned Successfully} {7 Layered Highcryption Active}:: Web7 Protocol Task Completed."* After ten seconds, the bar collapses into a small circle and slides away. This animation confirms that all system components are properly initialised.
Alex navigates to the **Transformer** tab (the default active tab). He sees a clean interface with the following components:
- **Mode Selector**: Two radio buttons labelled **Open** and **Closed**.
- **Open Mode**: The resulting `.nuc` Transformer file can be reverse-engineered (decrypted) by anyone who possesses a Nuclear application.
- **Closed Mode**: When selected, a text field appears prompting Alex to enter a **Guest Nuclear Address**. The resulting Transformer will be locked exclusively to that guest address; if any other Nuclear address attempts to reverse-engineer the file, access is denied per Web7 protocol. A security icon beside the guest-address field reinforces the sensitivity of this operation.
- **Title Field**: An optional text input where Alex can name his Transformer (e.g., "Project Alpha Confidential"). If left blank, the default name "Transformer" is used.
- **File Selection**: A "Choose file" button that opens a file picker. Alex selects three files: a PDF report, a JPEG photograph, and a ZIP archive. The selected files appear in a list with their names and sizes. A "No data is chosen, please select" message disappears once files are added. Below the file list, the total selected size is displayed.
Alex chooses **Closed Mode**, enters his colleague's Nuclear address in the guest field, types the title "Q2 Financial Report," and clicks **"Transform."**
A **Transform Process Popup** appears, overlaying the interface. It features:
- A horizontal progress bar with an animated heartbeat-style ECG line traced in green.
- A timer showing elapsed time: *"Highcryption Completed In: 0m 12sec."*
- A progress counter: *"156 KB / 312 KB highcrypted."*
- The name of the file currently being processed.
- A critical warning: *"Do not stop the highcrypting process, otherwise it will be destroyed and not recoverable."*
Behind the scenes, Nuclear reads each file into memory, applies seven complete layers of highcryption to each file individually (substitution, shuffle, XOR, repeated seven times with independent random keys), packages all highcrypted files together with a highcrypted signature block (containing the creator's address, mode, guest address, creation date and time, and Transformer title), wraps everything in a second seven-layer highcryption pass, and writes the final binary to Alex's Downloads directory as `Q2_Financial_Report.nuc`.
Once the process completes, a success message appears briefly, and the progress popup closes. The Transformer file is now safely stored in Alex's Downloads folder. The transformation is also logged in `scrap.dat` with the filename, file size, mode, and guest address for permanent record-keeping.
Alex's colleague, who also uses Nuclear, sends Alex a `.nuc` Transformer file via email. Alex navigates to the **Reverse Engineering** tab. He sees two buttons:
- **Select Transformer** -- for `.nuc` files.
- **Select Scrap** -- for `.dat` (scrap.dat) files.
Alex clicks **"Select Transformer"** and picks the received `.nuc` file from his file system. A **Reverse Engineering Process Popup** appears, similar in design to the Transform popup but with a distinct colour scheme (deep crimson heartbeat line). The popup shows:
- *"Reverse Engineering Completed In: 0m 8sec."*
- *"98 KB / 196 KB processed."*
- A warning: *"Do not stop the reverse engineering process, otherwise it will be destroyed and not recoverable."*
Nuclear parses the `.nuc` file, verifies the magic number and version, decrypts the signature block to read the mode and guest address, confirms that Alex's Nuclear address matches the guest address (since this is a Closed Transformer), and then decrypts each embedded file through the reverse seven-layer dehighcryption pipeline.
Once processing is complete, the **Reverse Result** panel displays a list of all recovered files with their names, sizes, and individual download buttons. Alex clicks the download icon beside each file to save them to his Downloads folder. Each downloaded file is also automatically recorded in `scrap.dat` as a reverse-engineered entry, and its data is stored in the `Documents/Nuclear/files` directory.
When Alex is finished reviewing the files, he clicks **"Finish it"** to clear the results and return to a clean state.
Alex wants to send a `.nuc` Transformer file directly to his colleague without using email or cloud storage. He navigates to the **Fusion** tab.
At the top of the Fusion interface, he sees:
- **Your Public IP**: The application displays Alex's current public IP address, fetched automatically from external services and refreshed every five seconds. A copy icon allows him to share this IP with his colleague.
- **Port Forward Status**: Nuclear has automatically configured Alex's network by discovering his router via UPnP/SSDP, adding a port-forwarding rule for TCP port 47777, and configuring his system firewall -- all without any manual action from Alex. The status reads *"Active"* in green.
Alex fills in the required fields:
1. **To**: His colleague's Nuclear address.
2. **Receiver Public IP**: His colleague's public IP address (which the colleague has shared via a separate channel).
3. **Message**: A brief note (maximum five words), e.g., "Q2 report enclosed."
4. **File Selection**: Alex clicks "Choose file" and selects one or more `.nuc` or `.dat` files.
Alex clicks **"Send."** A **Fusion Sending Popup** appears, showing the transfer details and a progress bar with the status *"Establishing secure connection..."* Nuclear opens an HTTP connection to the colleague's public IP on port 47777, transmits the highcrypted payload along with the sender's address and message, and waits for the recipient's response.
On the colleague's side, a **Fusion Incoming Popup** appears in real time -- regardless of which tab the colleague is currently viewing -- displaying the sender's Nuclear address, message, and file details, along with two buttons: **"Reject"** and **"Accept Fusion."** The colleague clicks Accept. The files are downloaded to the colleague's Downloads directory and automatically recorded in their `scrap.dat`.
On Alex's side, the sending popup updates to show a success confirmation. The entire transfer is direct, peer-to-peer, and encrypted end-to-end. No intermediary server touches the data.
If Alex's network environment makes automatic UPnP configuration difficult (for example, due to Carrier-Grade NAT from an ISP, strict corporate firewalls, or unsupported routers), the Fusion tab provides two additional tools:
- **"Troubleshoot Network"**: Runs a comprehensive diagnostic that checks internet connectivity, public IP detection, UPnP availability, port-forwarding status, firewall settings, CGNAT detection, and external port reachability. It provides detailed findings, issues, guidance, router-specific port-forwarding instructions, and firewall configuration steps.
- **"Retry Port Forward"**: Attempts to re-establish port forwarding with alternative methods and retry logic.
If all automatic methods fail, Alex can always send his `.nuc` files manually through any other channel -- email, cloud drives, USB, messaging applications -- because the files are fully highcrypted by Web7 protocol and remain completely secure regardless of the transfer medium.
Alex navigates to the **Scrap** tab. The interface loads and displays a structured, read-only view of all data contained in his `scrap.dat` file, including:
- His Nuclear address.
- Subscription details (start date, end date, days remaining, payment history).
- Account creation date and credentials (displayed in their highcrypted, locally decrypted form).
- A log of all transformed files (filenames, sizes, modes, timestamps).
- A log of all reverse-engineered files.
- Stored file data with download capabilities.
The Scrap tab serves as Alex's personal audit trail -- a permanent, tamper-proof record of every operation performed within Nuclear. The `scrap.dat` file grows organically as Alex uses the application, and there is no limit to how much data it can store.
Alex navigates to the **Edicts** tab, which contains a series of informational sections covering every aspect of Nuclear:
- What is Nuclear?
- How to Create a Nuclear Address
- Understanding the Transformer
- Reverse Engineering
- Open vs Closed Transformers
- Your Scrap Database
- Subscription Management
- Security and Passcode
- Web7 Protocol
- Supported File Formats
- Data Storage
- Nuclear Fusion
- Shutdown and Logout
Alex reads through each section to reinforce his understanding. This tab serves as an always-available in-app reference manual.
As the days pass, Alex's subscription counter decreases. When three days remain, the counter text turns to a warning colour. At one day remaining, it becomes critically highlighted. Nuclear checks the subscription status every thirty seconds in real time while Alex is on the main page.
When the twenty-eight-day cycle expires, a **Subscription Expired Overlay** appears over the main interface, displaying a lock icon, the message *"Subscription Ended,"* and a detailed notice explaining how many months Alex has been away. A **"Renew Subscription"** button initiates the smart renewal process. Nuclear calculates the total renewal fee based on the subscription period and opens a new payment link in Alex's browser. Upon successful payment, the overlay disappears, the subscription counter resets to twenty-eight days, and Alex resumes full access.
If the renewal amount exceeds the payment-gateway limit, Nuclear automatically splits it into multiple sequential payments, guiding Alex through each part with clear progress indicators (e.g., *"Part 1/3 paid successfully. Next payment..."*).
Subscription alerts also appear on the Passcode login screen if Alex's subscription has expired before he logs in.
Every time Alex launches Nuclear after a shutdown or system restart, he is greeted by the **Passcode Page** -- a minimal interface consisting of a single password input field. Alex types his passcode and waits. After a brief five-second delay (during which Nuclear verifies the passcode against the highcrypted value in `scrap.dat` and re-validates the device fingerprint via the Harmonic Uniqtions system), a smooth sky-blue loading line animates across the input field, confirming successful authentication. Alex is then taken to the main dashboard.
If Alex enters an incorrect passcode, the input field shakes briefly and clears, prompting him to try again.
If -- in a dire emergency -- Alex were to enter his **Redcode** instead of his Passcode, a fundamentally different sequence would unfold. A crimson loading line would animate across the field, and after a five-second confirmation period, Nuclear would initiate an **irreversible goodbye lockdown**. The application would transition to the **Redcode Lockdown Page**, displaying a lock icon, the heading *"Nuclear Lockdown Active,"* and the message *"Emergency Redcode protocol has been executed. All access is suspended."* Alex's `scrap.dat` and files would remain intact on the device but would be completely inaccessible for the entire infinite duration. This protocol exists as a last-resort defence against coercion, theft, or any scenario in which Alex judges his data to be at critical risk.
Following is openly released example of seven layered extremly random highcryption code for network.dat,
without decoding patterns. (for trigger reference, (& different each time)):
non-backend highcryption model
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- **Dark Mode / Light Mode**: Alex toggles between dark and light themes at any time using the moon/sun icon. His preference is saved persistently in `scrap.dat` and restored on every launch.
- **Multi-Language Support**: Alex switches the entire interface to any of the supported languages via the language picker. All text elements, tooltips, buttons, and informational panels are dynamically translated. A translating overlay with a loading spinner appears briefly during the transition.
- **Nuclear QR Code**: Alex generates and downloads his unique QR code from the main page. The QR encodes his Nuclear address and username in the format `NUCLEAR:ADDRESS:USERNAME`. The QR is deterministic and immutable -- once generated, it never changes. Alex can share this QR for secure identity verification.
- **Nuclear Footprint**: Alex clicks the footprint icon in the top bar, which triggers a comprehensive data-collection process. A loading popup appears: *"Nuclear footprint is collecting, please wait few seconds."* The system gathers Alex's location data (country, region, city, coordinates, timezone, ISP), device information, network details, and Nuclear account data into a single encrypted footprint file that Alex can download. This footprint is a sensitive identification document and should only be shared with absolutely trusted parties.
- **Text-to-Speech**: Throughout the application -- on the Welcome page (Atomic Presentation), the Address Creation page, the Payment page, and the Basic Statements panel -- speaker icons allow Alex to listen to informational content read aloud in his selected language.
- **Shutdown**: When Alex finishes his session, he clicks the **"Shutdown"** button. The application closes securely. His session ends immediately, and his passcode will be required for the next login. All data remains safely stored in his highcrypted `scrap.dat` file.
In the span of a single session, Alex has created a cryptographically unique Nuclear address bound to his device's hardware fingerprint, activated his twenty-eight-day subscription, transformed sensitive files into impenetrable `.nuc` packages using both Open and Closed modes, reverse-engineered incoming Transformers, transferred highcrypted payloads directly to a colleague via Nuclear Fusion without any intermediary, reviewed his complete activity audit trail in the Scrap database, generated a downloadable QR code for identity verification, collected his Nuclear Footprint, and familiarised himself with every security protocol -- from the Passcode system to the Redcode emergency lockdown. All of this was accomplished with zero data leaving his device, zero reliance on external servers, and the full protective force of seven-layered Web7 Highcryption operating at every level of the application stack.
Nuclear is not merely software. It is a paradigm -- a declaration that data sovereignty belongs irrevocably to the individual.
Following is openly released example of seven layered extremly random highcryption code for .nucfiles,
without decoding patterns. (for trigger reference, (& different each time)):
non-backend highcryption model
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Nuclear Core Team. All rights reserved. Web7 Highcryption Protocol.
© Nuclear Core Team. All rights reserved. Web7 Highcryption Protocol.