 The death note is not an SCP. But if it were, how would the SCP Foundation contain it? Hello, I'm Dr. Theron Sherman, and in this series we construct hypothetical containment procedures for non-SCP popular culture, entities, and objects. Let's begin. Almost all death notes currently in the human world are kept within a safe-class containment locker located at site while the few that are still on the loose are being tracked by our field agents. The first death note the Foundation acquired was put through rigorous testing. Dr. F***** who scored high in loyalty to the Foundation and low to medium in empathy ran numerous tests on the abilities of the death note. Several D-class later, the capabilities and the limitations of the object were well understood. Further intelligence was gained through interviews with the Shinigami entity, including information about the Shinigami realm and the existence of other death notes and Shinigami. In order to contain the other death notes, Foundation artificial intelligence constructs use algorithmic abnormalities and causes of death data to predict with 95.8% accuracy that a death note is in play, based on the progression of the testing its capabilities that all new owners go through. If you think that's a little far-fetched, remember that civilian algorithms used by the store chain known as Target were able to determine that a teen girl was pregnant before her father knew. Google, Target knows you're pregnant. It's a trip. It's incredible how fast civilians are catching up with Foundation tech. For those concerned for the safety of our requisition teams chasing down the death notes, have no fear. When you're part of a global secret organization that erases the memories of everyone who encounters us, we are not worried about you finding our name and face before we find you. Make sure to like and share this video, comment any creatures you would like to see containment procedures implemented for, and if you want to help us make bigger and better SCP projects, become a patron at the link in the description. Secure, contain, protect.