I'm not sure this is what you're getting at, but

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superluminal_communication
Birgit Dopfer's experiment

Although such communication is prohibited in the thought experiment
described above, some argue that superluminal communication could be
achieved via quantum entanglement using other methods that don't rely on
cloning a quantum system. One suggested method would use an ensemble of
entangled particles to transmit information,[3] similar to a type of
quantum eraser experiments.[4][5][6]

Birgit Dopfer, a student of Anton Zeilinger's, has performed an experiment
which seems to make possible superluminar communication through an
unexpected collective behaviour of two beams of entangled photons, one of
which passes through a double-slit, utilising the creation of a distance
interference pattern as bit 0 and the lack of a distance interference
pattern as bit 1 (or vice versa), without any other classical
channel.[4][7] Since it is a collective and probabilistic phenomenon, no
quantum information about the single particles is cloned and, accordingly,
the no cloning theorem remains inviolate. Physicist John G. Cramer at the
University of Washington is attempting to replicate Dopfer's experiment and
demonstrate whether or not it can produce superluminal
communication.[8][9][10][11]



On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 2:51 PM, James Bowery <[email protected]> wrote:

> What about probability theory?  Is that a clever way of encoding the
> postulates of relativity theory?
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