[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: art-stego



-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

[email protected] wrote:
> Another thing--just a wild idea--test the randomness of encrypted data
> storing it in an 8-bit mono .WAV (your choice of sample rates) file and
> listening to it.  Any correlations or patterns in the data should show 
> the playback as hums, clicks, squeals, or something.  It may even be
> to determine the algorithm by the sound patterns--a sort of "audio
> cryptanalysis."  Has anyone tried this?  Are there any .WAV stego 
> out there?

s-tools is an audio stego utility(s), but I've not used it.

As for testing methods, noise spheres are an interesting graphical method
for testing randomness (check the archives from late Dec/early Jan, I
posted a short Turbo Pascal program that implements them).

I'm not entirely sure if noise spheres will capture any crypto-relevant
correlations, but it seems worth investigating.

The reference to the article on noise spheres and other graphical methods
for testing PRNGs is:

  Pickover, Clifford A. 1995. "Random number generators: pretty good
     ones are easy to find."  The Visual Computer (1995) 11:369-377.

- --Rob
- ---
[This message has been signed by an auto-signing service.  A valid signature
means only that it has been received at the address corresponding to the
signature and forwarded.]

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.2
Comment: Gratis auto-signing service

iQBFAwUBMTwF5ioZzwIn1bdtAQG/ogF5AdudaHeEb+b2eOWs/XA3ZCIYGKrW1alg
abs4UNS5OC2jjqr5UPfrVq5LB8lMwLS7
=OjB4
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----