Original title: What is the probability that a number, picked at random from the real world, begins with the digit 1?
Article
The article argues that the intuitive one-in-nine expectation for first digits is usually wrong, because many naturally occurring numbers begin with 1 about 30% of the time and 9 less than 5%. It explains Benford's Law as a logarithmic first-digit distribution, listing expected frequencies from 1 through 9 and showing that the formula matches rivers, populations, stock prices, physical constants, and even purely mathematical sequences like Fibonacci and powers of 2. It traces the history from Simon Newcomb's 1881 logarithm table observation and largely ignored note, through Frank Benford's 1938 large-sample study and eponymous naming, to Theodore Hill's 1995 theorem that mixtures of distributions converge to Benford behavior, which explains broad empirical success. The piece presents the unique mathematical rationale as log-scale uniformity and scale invariance: if measurements are expressed in different units, the first-digit law should stay stable, and Benford is the fixed point that satisfies that requirement. It is careful to state limits, noting that numbers confined to narrow ranges or artificially assigned values, such as phone numbers, do not obey the law. It then turns to applications, showing fraud detection as a screening use case where fabricated values often show flatter, more human-random first-digit patterns, while emphasizing deviations are suggestive not decisive. The article cites contested examples including the 2009 Iran election totals, Enron filings, and Greek fiscal submissions, while repeatedly warning about legitimate nonfraud reasons for noncompliance. It further discusses how to reproduce results via an eight-dataset explorer using APIs and SPARQL, extracting first digits, computing mean absolute deviation against Benford predictions, and rer୩
Commenters split on the blocked report’s topic. Some praised the investigation-style communication for being clear, concise, and actionable with realistic impact estimates. Others focused on risks and feasibility of nuclear waste disposal, challenging whether containers can safely last 30,000 years and noting past off-site leaks, radon concerns, and fire incidents at storage sites. Additional remarks were highly skeptical of the economics, citing a cited two billion dollar figure and arguing funds might be better allocated, while others framed nuclear cleanup as inadequate compared with the environmental costs of coal power. Several participants referenced a speculative future market for nuclear cleanup, nuclear startup incidents and progress, and concerns that regulatory loosening could privilege data-center and military-adjacent nuclear development over broader public trust.