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Re: Cryptoanalysis
>(I am amazed how little exists on the web on the topic.) I had seen a
>few of the books at a local bookstore, but I was uncertain of their quality.
>(They also had a number of snake-oil crypto books.)
Well, as soon as people can charge a cyber-dime/quarter/or buck to read/
download you will see a change. Most authors make little (like $1.00/copy)
from book sales so if made cheap enough so that is easier to download than
pirate you will see a big change.
>The author has failed to call me back. I do have some serious concerns
>about the code. (There is not a single XOR used, except to clear
>registers!)
Why bother (kind like reinventing ASCII), we have good, proven crypto
algorithms, some even in public domain. Is easy to code. Hard part is
making it fast and easy & available anywhere (what I like about the
PGP enclyptor). Another hard part is good key management. Like computer
viruses in which there is nothing interesting about the propagation (what
makes a virus a virus), the crypto part is a done deal, have had good
stuff for years.
> I am starting to suspect that it is based on a mathematical
>progression based on the numbers 40, 28, 36.
Ah yes, being hearing impaired I always wanted a watch that would poke. My
1968 Seiko "Bellmatic" is close - ringing the bell makes it vibrate.
>I am trying to convince him of the futility of the task. (It is hard as his
>ego keeps getting in the way.) I just want to give him reasons why it is
>weak and not just glittering generalities.
Not futile, just already done. Should concentrate on things that are
"impossible" 8*).
Warmly,
Padgett