OT: Cryptography puzzle
rzed
rzantow at ntelos.net
Wed Jun 2 13:47:15 EDT 2004
Peter Hansen <peter at engcorp.com> wrote in
news:k8SdnetrrZQBkCPdRVn-hQ at powergate.ca:
> rzed wrote:
>
>> This thread reminds me of my favorite highly-insecure
>> encryption method. It does give a moment's pause to those
>> intent on decoding such things, and works far better with
>> longer messages than short, but it can bring a smile at least,
>> and will completely fool a child of six for several hours.
>> Here's an example of some encoded text:
>>
>> *[
>> Thgi snia lpn itxetht iw tpyrcedtp yrcn ednasdn ei rfruoy
>> ezamaye. Ko nse ri uqer dn alair et amlautxet sedo. Ce ddnas
>> edoc nehto (1853, 1927), bmargo rpemase ($315.23) hty lfeht
>> noe-docedot reikc, irteltti lasi ta h thguoh tlaffuts la utxetn
>> on reh tod. Nas tnuo marallo dset adhtiws kro wtimrof detpyrc
>> neronial, pni daerebna ct ire. Doced laut canatuo hti
>> wnevede/tpyrced ebyl idae rn actxe tsiht!
>> ]*
>
> And, perhaps most remarkably for an encryption algorithm, it
> happens to have the exact same letter-distribution frequency
> as regular English! ;-)
>
> -Peter
>
Ah yes, another feature! Although, if the message is written in
French, for instance, the distributions would dynamically adjust to
compensate.
--
rzed
More information about the Python-list
mailing list