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Resistance
See other Resistance Articles

Title: Sending Secret Web Messages
Source: Free (People's) Republic
URL Source: [None]
Published: Oct 10, 2006
Author: Some Freepnut
Post Date: 2006-10-10 15:40:42 by bluedogtxn
Keywords: None
Views: 112
Comments: 5

Sending secret messages over public internet lines can take place with new technique Eurekalert ^ | 10-Oct-2006 | Colleen Morrison

Posted on 10/10/2006 11:15:52 AM PDT by Teflonic

WASHINGTON, Oct. 10 -- A new technique sends secret messages under other people's noses so cleverly that it would impress James Bond--yet the procedure is so firmly rooted in the real world that it can be instantly used with existing equipment and infrastructure. At this week's annual meeting of the Optical Society of America in Rochester, N.Y., Bernard Wu and Evgenii Narimanov of Princeton University will present a method for transmitting secret messages over existing public fiber-optic networks, such as those operated by Internet service providers. This technique could immediately allow inexpensive, widespread, and secure transmission of confidential and sensitive data by governments and businesses.

Wu and Narimanov's technique is not the usual form of encryption, in which computer software scrambles a message. Instead, it's a more hardware-oriented form of encryption--it uses the real-world properties of an optical-fiber network to cloak a message. The sender transmits an optical signal that is so faint that it is very hard to detect, let alone decode.

The method takes advantage of the fact that real-world fiber-optics systems inevitably have low levels of "noise," random jitters in the light waves that transmit information through the network. The new technique hides the secret message in this optical noise.

In the technique, the sender first translates the secret message into an ultrashort pulse of light. Then, a commercially available optical device (called an optical CDMA encoder) spreads the intense, short pulse into a long, faint stream of optical data, so that the optical message is fainter than the noisy jitters in the fiber-optic network. The intended recipient decodes the message by employing information on how the secret message was originally spread out and using an optical device to compress the message back to its original state. The method is very secure: even if eavesdroppers knew a secret transmission was taking place, any slight imperfection in their knowledge of how the secret signal was spread out would make it too hard to pick out amidst the more intense public signal.

Although the researchers have made public this transmission scheme, and the components for carrying it out are all available, lead author Bernard Wu does not think this technique is being used yet.

"As the method uses optical CDMA technology, which is still undergoing significant research, I don't think any government or corporation is implementing this technique yet," Wu says.

While Wu foresees that government and businesses would have the greatest use for this technique, consumer applications are possible, he says. For example, consumers may occasionally transmit sensitive data via fiber-optic lines for a banking transaction. "This would not be a primary transmission scheme one would employ 24/7, as the price for enhanced security is a lower transmission rate," says Wu. Yet, since consumers send encrypted information to banks only intermittently, "the stealth method is practical" for that purpose, he says.

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#1. To: All (#0)

Seems to me like this would be very complicated, and that the presence of decoding equipment in itself would limit this tech to business and corporations encrypting methods "legitimately". It seems like a better way to encode information would be to include it in something innocuous, like an article, or to actually have a secret verbal code that regularly varies. This plus limiting communication strictly to the person or persons to whom a message was intended.

This is assuming that regular folks would want to communicated with each other in a way they don't want the government to be able to access in a common data- mining program or even a targeted hard drive examination or ISP examination (both of which can be conducted without a warrant under certain circumstances).

the law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets and steal bread.

bluedogtxn  posted on  2006-10-10   15:44:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: bluedogtxn (#0)

While Wu foresees that government and businesses would have the greatest use for this technique, consumer applications are possible, he says.

I imagine Foley, Frank, Kolbe, Hastert (?) and the rest of the DC kiddie porn crowd are lining up for this technology.

Buzzard  posted on  2006-10-10   16:39:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Buzzard (#2)

I imagine Foley, Frank, Kolbe, Hastert (?) and the rest of the DC kiddie porn crowd are lining up for this technology.

Well, it IS image based...

LOL

the law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets and steal bread.

bluedogtxn  posted on  2006-10-10   16:41:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: bluedogtxn (#1)

It seems like a better way to encode information would be to include it in something innocuous, like an article, or to actually have a secret verbal code that regularly varies

"ALAS,BABYLON."



***LEAP***

"I tell you, freedom and human rights in America are doomed. The U.S. Government will lead the American people, and the West in general, into an unbearable hell and choking life.
-- Osama bin Laden
"A prohibition law strikes at the very principles upon which our govt was founded."
- Lincoln
All our liberties are due to men who, when their conscience has compelled them, have broken the laws of the land.
--William K Clifford

IndieTX  posted on  2006-10-10   16:52:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: IndieTX (#4)

"ALAS,BABYLON."

"Condolences,Darkadia"

the law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets and steal bread.

bluedogtxn  posted on  2006-10-10   17:12:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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