Honestly, something like that would require manipulating time and space—basically applying the principles of teleportation, but for digital files. It's incredibly difficult to pull off unless you already know the recipient, the exact time and place of delivery, and a bunch of other variables.

Interestingly, I was discussing this very topic a few days ago with an expert in quantum mechanics—specifically, how the past influences the future, yet our actions are not entirely free, since theoretically everything should be immutable.
During that conversation, I posed a provocative question, which I'll bring up here as well: what if, instead of the past influencing the future, it is actually the future that, for reasons of equilibrium, guides our choices in the past? After all, in the future, we might "remember" crucial moments of our lives and "connect" with them to bring us precisely to where we stand.
If this were true, then you would already know if you're destined to win or lose this puzzle, and you would make choices accordingly—either to reach victory or, conversely, to avoid it altogether.