We did, in a way. One of the sources used was random.org (uses radio receivers tuned to static from atmospheric noise: hardware RNG as a service). I also had less than 3 weeks to take it from proposal to production.
Combining two independent sources obtained by different people and using a cryptographic commitment scheme ensured that 1) no one person could fix the results or make it nonrandom (protection against Eddie Tipton-style attacks), 2) if at least one of the independent sources was random, the result would be.
Combining two independent sources obtained by different people and using a cryptographic commitment scheme ensured that 1) no one person could fix the results or make it nonrandom (protection against Eddie Tipton-style attacks), 2) if at least one of the independent sources was random, the result would be.