Devil's Night

History

The History of Cryptography (4) — The Arab Cryptanalysts

by FOX on 03:59 PM, under History

How many different simple substitution ciphers exists? We can count them by enumerating all the possible values of each single plain-text letter. First we assign a to one of the 26 possible cipher text letters from A to Z, then assign b to the rest 25 cause one of the letter in cipher alphabet has been occupied by letter a; then there are 26*25 = 650 possible ways to assign a and b. Thus the total number of ways to assign 26 plain-text letters to 26 cipher-text letters by using each cipher-text once, is

26*25*24*23…*3*2*1 = 26! = 403291461126605635584000000

there are more than 10 26 possibilities for a code-breaker, those who were attempting crack the substitution cipher. if they just simply test each possible keys. If a code-breaker is able to check one million keys per second, it takes him/her 1013 years to finish all jobs. It’s even longer than the life of universe. So, is there an efficient way to break it?

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The History of Cryptography (3) — Caesar Cipher

by FOX on 02:59 PM, under History

The alternative of transposition is substitution. One of the earliest description of encryption by substitution can be dated back to first century B.C. During Gallic Wars, the great emperor Julius Caesar, invented the famous Caesar’s Cypher.

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The History of Cryptography (2) — Spartan Scytale

by FOX on 01:24 AM, under History

In parallel with the development of steganography, there was the evolution of cryptography, derived from Greek word krypto, which means hidding. Despite of hiding the existence of a message by steganography. Cryptography chooses to hide its meaning by a process called encryption.

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The History of Cryptography (1) — The evolution of Secret Writing

by FOX on 10:31 PM, under History

“Where shall I begin, please your Majesty?”

“Begin at the beginning”, the King said gravely, “and go on till you come to the end; then stop.”

Alice’s Adventure in Wonderland; Lewis Caroll

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