Showing posts with label Enigma. Show all posts

Wanna get yourself a portable Enigma encryption machine?

April 03, 2006
Hurry up, you still have 5 hours to participate in the sale at Ebay as the BetaNews reported "eBay has long been a purveyor of the unusual and the unique, but it's not often an authentic piece of tech history captures as much attention as the Enigma 3 portable cipher machine that has racked up bids of almost 16,000 euros. The Enigma device was used extensively by Nazi Germany during World War II."



The Enigma machine was a key success factor for the Germans during WWII, until of course its messages started getting deciphered, it's great someone managed to preserve and resell one. Today's situation is entirely different, namely an average Internet user can easily encrypt data achieving military standards with the use of public tools, where Phil Zimmerman's PGP has been cause troubles for governments across the world since its release.


However, what the majority of end users don't realize is the how the keys lenght and the passphrase's quality means totally nothing when law enforcement is sometimes empowered to use spyware, and that quantum cryptography is also subject to attacks. Client side attacks and social engineering ones don't take into consideration any key lenght -- just naivety. In one of my previous posts "Get the chance to crack unbroken Nazi Enigma ciphers"


I mentioned about the existence of a distributed project to crack unroken nazi ciphers you can freely participate into. Being a total paranoid in respect to my favorite SetiATHome, you should also consider the possibility of a SETI Hacker -- which partly happened in Contact in case you reckon.



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Get the chance to crack unbroken Nazi Enigma ciphers

February 27, 2006
Nice initiative I just came across to. From the "M4 Message Breaking Project" :



The M4 Project is an effort to break 3 original Enigma messages with the help of distributed computing. The signals were intercepted in the North Atlantic in 1942 and are believed to be unbroken. Ralph Erskine has presented the intercepts in a letter to the journal Cryptologia. The signals were presumably enciphered with the four rotor Enigma M4 - hence the name of the project.


This project has officially started as of January 9th, 2006. You can help out by donating idle time of your computer to the project. If you want to participate, please follow the client install instructions for your operating system:

Unix Client Install
Win98 Client Install
Win2000 Client Install
WinXP Home Client Install
WinXP Pro Client Install



The first message is already broken as a matter of fact, and looks like that :



Ciphertext :

nczwvusxpnyminhzxmqxsfwxwlkjahshnmcoccakuqpmkcsmhkseinjus
blkiosxckubhmllxcsjusrrdvkohulxwccbgvliyxeoahxrhkkfvdrewezlx
obafgyujqukgrtvukameurbveksuhhvoyhabcjwmaklfklmyfvnrizr
vvrtkofdanjmolbgffleoprgtflvrhowopbekvwmuqfmpwparmfha
gkxiibg



Deciphered and in plain text :

From Looks:Radio signal 1132/19 contents:Forced to submerge during attack, depth charges. Last enemy location08:30h, Marqu AJ 9863, 220 degrees, 8 nautical miles, (I am) following(the enemy). (Barometer) falls (by) 14 Millibar, NNO 4, visibility 10.



You no longer need the NSA to assist in here, still they sure have contributed a lot while "Eavesdropping on Hell", didn't they?



Distributed Computing is a powerful way to solve complex tasks, or at least put the PC power of the masses in use. It's no longer required to hire processing power on demand from any of these jewels, but download a client, start participating, or find a way to motivate your future participants. In my previous post "The current state of IP spoofing" I commented on the ANA Spoofer Project and featured a great deal of other distributed projects. Meanwhile, the StartdustAThome project also started gaining grounds, so is it ETs, Space dust, global IP spoofing susceptibility, or unbroken Nazi's ciphers - you have the choice where to participate!



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