steganography, for fun and ... backup?
Jul. 30th, 2005 01:58 pmSteganography is the art of hiding one message inside another. It's been used to hide secrets for thousands of years, often in plain sight. This paper describes how steganography works using modern techniques to hide data inside images so that they're undetectable. The paper is especially good because it has a postscript about steganography throughout history, and includes my favorite oft-cited example:
Anyway. The point of this is to link to this article in which a guy has decided steganography + flickr = free backup. This is a wacky thing to do -- even wackier than the people who use gmail as a file system -- and takes "hiding information in plain sight" to a whole new level. I wonder if he plans on flickr tagging the images so he can find them again?
One of the oldest stego schemes was to shave the head of a messenger and tattoo a message on the messenger's head. After the hair grows back, the messenger can be sent to the intended recipient, where the messenger's head can be shaved and the message recovered. This method is decidingly clever, patient, and very low-tech, and goes right to the heart of steganography's literal meaning of "covered writing."I don't know if I buy this, it sounds like an exceedingly slow form of message passing, but on the flip side, this is usually attributed to "the Romans", and it certainly took longer to get around back then...
Anyway. The point of this is to link to this article in which a guy has decided steganography + flickr = free backup. This is a wacky thing to do -- even wackier than the people who use gmail as a file system -- and takes "hiding information in plain sight" to a whole new level. I wonder if he plans on flickr tagging the images so he can find them again?
no subject
Date: 2005-08-05 10:45 pm (UTC)