The FAQ on elektron.com says it’s a digital noise generator, so I assume it’s not a sample. I had to look up how you would generate white noise digitally and wiki says “White noise may be generated digitally with a digital signal processor, microprocessor, or microcontroller . Generating white noise typically entails feeding an appropriate stream of random numbers to a digital-to-analog converter[url=“Digital-to-analog converter - Wikipedia”]. The quality of the white noise will depend on the quality of the algorithm used.”

So yeah that’s probably what is happening in the Rytm and the A4. They do have a lot of digital processing going on so I would think it would be easy enough to implement.

However if you did use a sample, and it was actually perfect white noise and looped properly, I don’t think you’d really be able to tell the difference between it and a generated one. They would both contain all frequencies and equal amplitude and because of this would avoid the general limitation of sample playback engines, the length of the sample becoming shorter as the pitch is raised, because white noise has no particular pitch and contains the whole audible spectrum.