lightweight encryption of text file
Robert Kern
robert.kern at gmail.com
Mon Jan 11 11:44:10 EST 2010
On 2010-01-09 03:52 AM, Anthra Norell wrote:
> Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
> > I have a plain text file which I would like to protect in a very
> > simple minded, yet for my purposes sufficient, way. I'd like to
> > encrypt/convert it into a binary file in such a way that possession of
> > a password allows anyone to convert it back into the original text
> > file while not possessing the password one would only see the
> > following with the standard linux utility 'file':
> >
> > [fetchinson at fetch ~]$ file encrypted.data
> > encrypted.data: data
> >
> > and the effort required to convert the file back to the original text
> > file without the password would be equivalent to guessing the
> > password.
> >
> > I'm fully aware of the security implications of this loose
> > specification, but for my purposes this would be a good solution.
> >
> > What would be the simplest way to achieve this using preferably stock
> > python without 3rd party modules? If a not too complex 3rd part
> > module made it really simple that would be acceptable too.
>
> Daniel,
>
> Here's what looks like another thread veering off into package-ology,
> leaving a stumped OP behind.
>
> "Don't use a random generator for encryption purposes!" warns the
> manual, of which fact I was reminded in no uncertain terms on this forum
> a few years ago when I proposed the following little routine in response
> to a post very similar to yours. One critic challenged me to encode my
> credit card data and post it. Which I did.
Actually, you just "encrypted" your credit card number and challenged
comp.lang.python to crack it. No one challenged you to do anything of the sort.
Fortunately, the ever-watchful eye of Google was upon us that day:
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/5fb9ffada975bae9?pli=1
> Upon which another critic
> conjured up the horror vision of gigahertzes hacking my pathetic little
> effort to pieces as I was reading his message. Of the well-meaning kind,
> he urged me to put an immediate stop to this foolishness. I didn't.
>
> No unplanned expenditures ensued.
That's because comp.lang.python is not full of thieves, not because your
algorithm is worth a damn.
p3.py imposes no more overhead than this, but it has some real security
properties. To quote Paul Rubin from that previous thread:
"""
Since good encryption schemes that don't have significant performance
penalties are widely available, why mess with a crap scheme EVER? Why
use a solution that "might or might not be adequate" when you can use
one that's definitely ok?
"""
--
Robert Kern
"I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma
that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had
an underlying truth."
-- Umberto Eco
More information about the Python-list
mailing list