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CERN’s FPGA Failure and the Suppression of 3D-Flow and 3D-CBS: A Call to Save Millions of Lives and Billions of Euros

After decades of outreach and evidence—never refuted—it is urgent to fund two 3D-CBS devices that could halve cancer deaths, and to support further press releases to inform taxpayers and decision-makers.

No refutations from CERN, IEEE, CPRIT, PAS, or scientists—despite press releases reaching over 300 million people worldwide. 3D-Flow & 3D-CBS can save billions of euro and halve cancer deaths. Immediate funding for the inventor to prove these benefits experimentally is urgent.

DALLAS, Sept. 06, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- (In PDF https://bit.ly/3UCW8XE) The Crosetto Foundation for the Reduction of Cancer Deaths, a registered nonprofit with North Texas Giving Day (https://www.northtexasgivingday.org/organization/1951), has earned the Gold Seal for Transparency from GuideStar.org for eight consecutive years (https://www.guidestar.org/profile/03-0544575). The Foundation urgently calls on the public to help expose and correct scientific and institutional inconsistencies—issues that anyone, with or without a scientific background, can understand through common sense and factual evidence.

A $12 Billion Mistake

On 20 June 2025, the CERN Council approved FPGA-based upgrades for ATLAS and CMS (https://bit.ly/4mDncCi) despite decades of evidence showing that Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) systems are incapable of filtering data from 8 billion events per second. Their architecture is fundamentally inadequate for the demands of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and its high-luminosity upgrade (HL-LHC).

Technical and Financial Concerns

FPGA architecture cannot effectively filter meaningful data from the LHC's 1.2 billion events per second, which results in the recording of ‘garbage’ data that has already wasted over $4 billion in past decades. CERN’s new 20-trillion-transistor, a 650 kW FPGA system built for the HL-LHC, will similarly fail to filter data from the projected 8 billion events per second. This failure will cost an additional $12 billion in the coming decade, primarily due to the HL-LHC’s daily operational cost of $4 million, and the wasted time of thousands of scientists analyzing irrelevant information.