cryptography & cryptanalysis classics. the evolution of secret writing 1. steganography

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Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics

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Page 1: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

Cryptography&

Cryptanalysis

Classics

Page 2: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

The Evolution of Secret Writing

1. Steganography

Page 3: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

2. Cryptography “The aim of cryptography is not to hide the

existence of a message, but rather to hide its meaning, a process known as encryption”

Page 4: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

• Transposition

Cow cow, cwo, owc, ocw, wco, woc.

• Substitution

c Xo Gw P

cow XGP

Page 5: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

“For example, consider this short sentence”has

50,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000rearrangements.

Page 6: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

Rail Fence Transposition

Page 7: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

Spartan Scytale

Page 8: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

Substitution

Cipher

meet at midnight CUUZ VZ CGXSGIBZ

Page 9: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

CAESAR Shift Cipher

Page 10: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography
Page 11: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

Kerckhoffs’ Principle: The security of a cryptosystem must not depend on keeping secret the cryptoalgorithm. The security depends only

on keeping secret the key.

Page 12: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

JULIUS CAESAR

JULISCAER

Page 13: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

Muslims

Monoalphabetic Substitution Cipher

a #b +

Cryptanalysis

The Science of Unscrambling a message without knowledge of the key.

Page 14: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

Frequency Analysis

al-Kindı’s“A Manuscript on Deciphering Cryptographic

Messages”

Page 15: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

English

Page 16: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography
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Page 19: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

P is a consonant.

Page 20: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

• Combination OO appears twice, whereas XX does not appear at all.• X and Y appear on their own in the ciphertext. (a and I are the only English

word that consisit of a single letter)• In the English language, the letter h frequently goes before the letter e (as

in the, then, they, etc.), but rarely after e.

h

Page 21: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

O=e, X=a, Y=i, B=h.

the most common three-letter words in English are the and and, and these are relatively easy to spot—Lhe, which appears six times, and aPV, which appears five times.

P=n, V=d, L=t.

Page 22: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

• Every word has a vowel in it, so C in Cn is a vowel. The only vowels remaining are o and u. u does not fit so C = o.

• We also have the word Khe, which implies that K represents either t or s. But we already know that L = t, so it becomes clear that K = s.

• thoMsand and one niDhts thousand and one nights

Page 23: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

A VOID BY GEORGES PEREC AVOIDBYGERSPC

Page 24: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography
Page 25: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

1. Begin by counting up the frequencies of all the letters in the ciphertext. About five of the letters should have a frequency of less than 1 percent, and these probably represent j, k, q, x and z. One of the letters should have a frequency greater than 10 percent, and it probably represents e. If the cipher-text does not obey this distribution of frequencies, then con-sider the possibility that the original message was not written in English.

2. the most common repeated letters are ss, ee, tt, ff, ll, mm and oo.3. The only one-letter words in English are a and I. The commonest two-letter

words are of, to, in, it, is, be, as, at, so, we, he,by, or, on, do, if,me,my, up, an, go, no, us, am . The most common three-letter words are the and and.

Page 26: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

Code

• One of the simplest improvements to the security of the monoalphabetic substitution cipher was the introduction of nulls, symbols or letters that were not substitutes for actual letters, merely blanks that represented nothing.

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Page 29: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

The Pigpen Cipher

Page 30: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

New Ciphers

Leon Battista Alberti

hello AFPAD

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Page 36: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

L1-L2-L3-L4-L5

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Page 40: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

EMILY

Page 41: Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Classics. The Evolution of Secret Writing 1. Steganography

THANK YOU!!