The article "Reverse Penetration: AADI, Counter‑Intelligence, and the Open Ending" is a supplementary piece to the main "Practical MBM" series. It analyses a scenario in which a probe returns to our reality (Alpha), but along with it — or through it — an Adversary Agent in a Disguising Image (AADI) penetrates our world. Unlike the foundational article focused on protection protocols, this work emphasises the recognition of counter‑intelligence: how to tell that the adversary is already inside, how to distinguish disguise from reality, and how to interpret the agent's provocative behaviour. A formal definition of AADI is introduced: an object displaying signs of intelligent control, appearing in an impossible environment, and using culturally specific images for concealment. A system of alert indicators for both the Centre and the probe is proposed (ranging from Green to Black alert levels), along with two new protocols: "AADI" (agent detection) and "Sentry" (permanent surveillance). The adversary's "audacity" is analysed as a possible provocation, capability test, or psychological operation. The scientific justification draws on game theory, the psychology of disguise, the concepts of Hierarchical Information Immunity (HII) and the Information‑Distorting Circuit (IDC), as well as works on disinformation. The main conclusion is that we do not know how the story ended, and we must learn to live with this uncertainty. Contact between universes triggers a process of mutual adaptation that cannot be fully controlled — much like the joining of the biota of South and North America, which permanently transformed both ecosystems.
Alexander Yourievitch Kotelnikov (Mon,) studied this question.