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June 18th, 2002, 10:40 PM
#1
New crypto challenge!
Here's a new crypto challenge!
This one is actually an encoded message in plain English. See if you can decipher it!
TF IZ TLE I
FIZL ITI ELEZ JTZL E ZET
FI ETF Z
ZT YT EL V E M TEZ FL VI
Tip: it's not really mathematical...
Have fun!
Ammo
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June 18th, 2002, 11:07 PM
#2
Junior Member
i used a decrypter, and it couldnt find anything,.
illv //
illv // seen the digital world from monochrome dial up to what it is today.
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June 19th, 2002, 12:00 AM
#3
Banned
ok, in a 20 questions style id be asking the following (assumin i get yes to my answers):
is it character substitution?
dose the character standard change with every letter?
ok thats only 2 outta 20 but those are my thought on it. i am thinking that its character substitution cause its just characters, but then that it changes characters cause thers 3 seperate 1 character groups in it and, assuming that it is in english, theres only 3 one character words in the dictionary, I, A, and j (tho ill be damned if i have ever see j used as a word before)
these are great, i got a college interview tomorrow and need to wake up in 7 hours and im spending time cracking sweet nothings, i love this place, there should be more challenges, there REALLY fun
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June 19th, 2002, 01:02 AM
#4
Nice Idea
I like the idea of the "crypto challenge"
But ummm... maybe a hint would help?
Is it like a cryptoquip?, or is it like encrypted with a variation of ROT-39?
Simon Templer
\"Your work is to discover your world and then with all your heart give yourself to it. \"
-The Buddha
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June 19th, 2002, 02:07 AM
#5
Ok, tip time:
1- It's not really an encryption "alogrithm"... It's rather home made (think outside the box!
2- It's "based" on an old binary encoding standard
3- Encrypting and decrypting in this way is a two step process.
Next tip I'll give you an a cleartext and it's ciphertext example pair!
Ammo
Credit travels up, blame travels down -- The Boss
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June 19th, 2002, 04:53 AM
#6
Ok, I sense this could get old fast if I don't post more clues...
Here's an example of a cleartext / ciphertext pair:
Cleartext: "Just an example"
Ciphertext:
IZTE VT YI F
JE ZL
I EUZ JF TF IEFL JTV L
This might give you a better starting point...
Ammo
Credit travels up, blame travels down -- The Boss
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June 19th, 2002, 05:43 PM
#7
Ok other tip..
Think more steganography...
Also, the text font does have some importance... AO's font might not be the best for this, but it is still decipherable...
Two step encryption process goes like this:
1- Encode in an old binary format
2- Obfuscate in a steganographic style
(Reverse to decode)
Ammo
PS: Next tip I'll try to post a little win32 prog (written in C++ MFC) that encodes/decodes..
It'll give away the cleartext of the challenge but you'll still have to explain how it works..
Credit travels up, blame travels down -- The Boss
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June 20th, 2002, 03:17 AM
#8
All right... the "old binary code" is morse code...
Can anyone see it now?
Ammo
Credit travels up, blame travels down -- The Boss
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June 20th, 2002, 03:39 AM
#9
I can see the correlations, but have not had the time to look at it anymore than being able to recognize it. Not that it helps... LOL
\"Windows has detected that a gnat has farted in the general vicinity. You must reboot for changes to take affect. Reboot now?\"
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June 20th, 2002, 06:45 AM
#10
S...O....S...N...E...E...D...A...N...O...T...H...E...R...H...I...N...T.
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