Leftmost word “Item” of Image 2 in the Aspose blob {L21/18.1/64}
Leftmost word “Item” of Image 2 in the Dr Wright’s Image2.tex file {L21/22.2/3}
Thus, every letter of the word Item had been placed in the identical (to 0.035 microns) position in both the Aspose blob and Dr Wright’s Image2.tex file.
When his use of the Aspose blob file to create the Image2.tex file in his White Paper LaTeX Files was put to Dr Wright, he veered between claiming that he had achieved this on his graphic tablet to blaming Mr Ager-Hanssen and Zafar Ali KC.
212: 1 Q. If we then go to page 3 {L21/22.2/3} and go to
2 {L21/18.1/64} on the left-hand side and let's go to
3 the word "item". You forgot to change the word "item"
4 from its Aspose encoding, didn't you, Dr Wright?
5 A. I did not.
6 Q. Every letter of that word has been positioned in exactly
7 the same position as your Aspose output, right?
8 A. Where is this document from?
9 Q. The document on the right is image 2.tex from your White
10 Paper LaTeX files.
11 A. Which particular?
12 Q. All of them, actually.
13 A. That's not --
14 Q. It doesn't change from 17 November, the earliest one
15 that we've got.
16 A. That's not how mine was, so ...
17 Q. This is down to 0.035 of a micron, right?
18 A. Possibly.
19 Q. Which is about the length of a short segment of DNA,
20 Dr Wright. It is tiny, right?
21 A. A digital file will do it, but mine -- none of mine have
22 that error, the originals.
23 Q. That is your LaTeX file, Dr Wright, on the right. That
24 is it.
25 A. Not necessarily. As I said, I had someone on my
213: 1 computer the whole time.
2 Q. Dr Wright, you cannot and would not have placed those
3 letters to that level of accuracy if you were composing
4 the Bitcoin White Paper in LaTeX from scratch.
5 A. No, I would, because what you do is you use a tool. So
6 the tool is a graphic tablet, and when you draw on
7 a graphic tablet it records, right down to the --
8 Q. Dr Wright, it's absurd to suppose that using a graphic
9 tablet you're going to get exactly the same level of
10 accuracy, down to 0.035 nanometres -- so 0.035 of
11 a micron, actually -- get it right -- sorry.
12 MR JUSTICE MELLOR: A schoolboy error.
13 MR GUNNING: Down to 0.035 of a micron, using your tablet.
14 A. No, actually, the other way round. What you're saying
15 is if you take a digital document and then analyse it.
16 But what I suspect, if this in my Overleaf,
17 unfortunately, Mr Ager-Hanssen already demonstrated that
18 he had access to all my things.
19 Q. That's not going to do either, because the syntax of
20 the code for your images is identical to the syntax of
21 this Aspose output, right?
22 A. It's similar in parts, yes.
23 Q. Every line break in the code is in the same place, every
24 command is in the same order, every line is in the same
25 order. You used Aspose, Dr Wright.
214: 1 A. No, I did not. What I had done before this is I'd said
2 how important this was to Mr Ager-Hanssen and Ali Zafar.