@feedo
Im comments only because you follow the rabbit. Do not Look me in the eye, it's hostile. Have you noticed that for a rabbit I have short ears but my left hand is raised up?
Do you see her now?
It looks from a different perspective like a pigeon and a dove always carries information
Congratulations @RealOnTheMF - he should know for what but this is not the whole picture, do you feel that you miss something?
Curiosity has gotten the better of me..., Are you saying that these white squares are supposed to be an arm?
https://imgur.com/a/fxlGnAs for your last comment, which I suppose is supposed to imply a hint that RealOnTheMF was on the right track.., I have a slightly hard time believing that, but it is certainly one of the odder things that's turned up.
Here is why I do not think that RealOnTheMFs message is a collision with the actual Cypher. A fair amount of the letters in the message were generated by bits from all 6 tracks. That means for those letters to appear in the same order while also uncovering what the missing letters are, we'd have to find a modulus that distributes the bits in a different order, but still places 27 bits in the exact same position.
It's possible that RealOnTheMF discovered the actual cypher, and his message is indeed the intended message. In that case, it's possible that the scrambled letters are another cypher key, or maybe another cypher in themselves..., but.., This means that the author created a message and applied a bacon cypher to it, then redistributed bits in the bitstring so that they are located in every fifth position. Then the author performed a vigenere cipher and the resulting string has a 0 for every 6th bit.., even further, all the other even bits are 1?

That seems hard to believe they would be able to do.., although not impossible (Obviously.., as we can clearly see that a message, whether intended or not, does indeed exist inside of this pattern).
After having performed now thousands of debaconings on random bitstrings, I know that it is actually really easy to generate words out of nothing using the bacon cypher. That said, they are usually smaller words like "are" or "barf", and not once have I ever generated three words together in a row..,, "iskeyfile" took 45 bits.., which seems unlikely they'd line up like that out of pure coincidence, although also not impossible.
in either case, it is a puzzling occurrence.