*Notation: Here $S^1$ denotes the circle, which we view as $[0, 1]$ with its endpoints identified under the Lebesgue measure. We equip the circle with its natural length metric.* Let $\{\epsilon_i\}_{i \geq 1}$ be iid uniformly distributed random variables on $[0, 1]$ (with underlying probability space $\Omega$), and define the random maps $T_i: \Omega \times S^1 \to S^1$ by $$T_i (x) := 2 \epsilon_ix \text{ mod } 1.$$ For $x \in S^1$, we write for short $D_n (x) := T_n \dots T_1 (x).$ **Question:** Is it true that for all $x, y \in S^1$, we have $$d(D_n (x), D_n (y)) \to 0$$ almost surely?