First Steganographic Image Found In The Wild 306
Niels Provos writes: "After months of searching for steganographic content on eBay and
elsewhere -- downloading millions of images, we were finally able to
find an image with a stegangraphic message hidden in it. Stegdetect and Stegbreak made short process with it. It took less
than a second to compute the secret key necessary to extract the
hidden message. Two commands at the prompt, and we found the hidden
message to be an image of B-52 scrapyard. Right off Terraserver."
Yeah, except for... (Score:5, Informative)
Hidden message?
Hidden like a fox!
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:3, Offtopic)
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:4, Insightful)
My only exception to stwilwebm's comment above is the phrase "quite possibly". IMNSHO, "not bloody likely" is the correct adverbial phrase.
Let's all stop and think about this for a meaning. I wish to send an important secret message to my evil henchmen on another continent. Do I send an encrypted letter? Do I send a human messenger by plane to carry the message? Do I phone them and use secret phrases with hidden meanings to convey the message to them?
Apparently not, if we are to believe the Security Experts who don't want us to hear Bin-Laden. Apparently the best way to send secret messages, is to tape yourself and hope that the corporate minions of the Great Satan will transmit your message, complete, clear (no poorly translated voice-overs, if you please) and in a timely fashion.
Am I the only one who thinks that if Bin-Laden really is that stupid, that we have little to worry about?
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:3, Interesting)
If the secret message is just "the target is X, the date is Y" where X and Y are a relatively small list of predefined targets and dates, you don't need a whole lot of code phrases -- or even signs, given a video tape (consider signals between catcher and pitcher in baseball, for example) -- to convey which X and Y you mean.
Farfetched? Not really. But even if it is, why take the slightest chance on spreading the enemy's message for him?
And to answer your questions: Do I send an encrypted letter? Do I send a human messenger by plane to carry the message? Do I phone them and use secret phrases with hidden meanings to convey the message to them? The answer is NO, not if you are being actively sought out and such communications might fall into the wrong hands, betray your location and/or not get delivered.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2)
It wasn't just WWII (Score:2)
Transmission of nonsense phrases to spies in Eastern Europe continued throughout the 1950s, under the codename The Goon Show. To this day, many of them have not been decoded and the chief steganographer [thegoonshow.co.uk] is likely to carry their secret meanings to his grave.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not implausible to assume that the terrorists were instructed to watch that channel to receive instructions after the first US attacks occured.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm still bitter it's not getting played on US tv stations; how can a video taped statement from public enemy number one not be "newsworthy"? They say it "might contain a message". Well one message I heard was "infidels out". Is that the message they don't want us to hear? That his main demand is for us to stop occupying his 'homeland' and whatnot?
Sure, there might be a hidden message too. But people waiting to get the hidden message will undoubtedly obtain it from some foriegn news source that DOES deem it "newsworthy".
Censorship will only hide the message from joe sixpack & friends, and I think thats exactly the goal.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2, Interesting)
Especially if the justification is not what he actually said, but the secret hidden message that that must not be heard!
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:3, Insightful)
The media (as encouraged by the US government) has whipped the masses into a hateful frenzy, with Osama as the target.
Forget looking for the cause of his actions. Let's just label him a "mad man", and state that his goal is "the end of the free world".
Showing, or not showing his press releases is not going to make a whit of difference in this "war". Just like my posting my views is not going to change the mind of someone who wishes to believe the rhetoric and absolute crap that is spewing forth from the main stream media.
Overall, I enjoy being a U.S. citizen, but I am completely embarrassed, and even mortified by some of the actions that we (as a country) condone, and those that we perpetrate.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2, Interesting)
No, they've given us the reason. We're a "beacon of freedom"!
(and if you can swallow that, I've got a lollypop in my pants for you to try next.)
Overall, I enjoy being a U.S. citizen, but I am completely embarrassed, and even mortified by some of the actions that we (as a country) condone, and those that we perpetrate.
(My feelings exactly.)
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:4, Flamebait)
Here are some of the things that make me embarrassed to be a U.S. citizen:
Killing hundreds of thousands of innocent unsuspecting people, both through our actions, and our inaction.
Claiming to be the "land of the free and home of the brave" but supporting dictatorships, and refusing cease producing land mines.
Patting ourselves on the back and proclaiming what a great nation we are, while letting much of the world suffer without electricity, reliable sources of food, clean water to drink, etc. (No, I'm not a socialist, but I do believe in giving a fair opportunity for success.)
My personal favorite. Supporting Osama and his "freedom fighters" in their fight against the communists of the (former) Soviet Union, and then dropping funding when we no longer gain anything from it. Not that this was a isolated or singular event. This is a recurring activity. Do you have any concept of the government (or living conditions) in Kuwait right now? To forstall any questions, I don't. That's the point. Our interests were served, so we feel no obligation to pay any more attention.
In the end, the root of all violence is violence. I wish no ill will on you, or the terrorists. I hope that they are in a place where they can reflect upon the actions they commited, and see the pain and suffering that it caused. I don't wish them to feel shame, just that they might grow, and if faced with the same choice again, make a more peaceful one. As for myself, I live with the daily struggle of not flipping the bird to those motorists that feel no remorse in cutting me off. We all have to start somewhere.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2)
Here are some of the things that make me embarrassed to be a U.S. citizen:
Don't be!
While all those are true (and I could mention many other shameful actions) I think 99% of the world population can establish a clear distinction between American people and American government. While it's true that up to Bill Clinton US presidents have been democractly chosen (not sure about JFK), there's not much one can do when options are so limited, as far as candidates are concerned.
Unless you are a Government policy maker or a journalist, you only have reasons to be proud. Just try to keep your congressman in a tight leash.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2)
Of course in a situation where 90% of the American people are supporting the actions of the American government, and are actively suppressing dissent, there is very little difference that is relevant. The 10% have already lost out to what amounts to mob rule.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Before you throw the idea out, consider that more civilians in the Middle East have died as a result of American action than the other way around.
And as you point out, one can't just sit back and let these things continue. One must seek justice. I have a feeling that the attackers said the same things.
Wish I had a solution to offer.
Re:are you really that dumb? (Score:2)
Personally, I see the actions of Sept. 11 in a similar light to the Columbine shootings. The "outcasts" were picked on and ostricized until they snapped, and a lot of innocents died. It was a tragedy. But I don't wish ill will on either Eric Harris or Dylan Klebold. Again, I hope that they are in a place that they can reflect on the results of their actions, and realize that the choice that they made was not the best possible.
I'm sorry if you don't agree with my opinions. I'm sorry to have offended you. I'm sorry that you find my comments ignorant. I have spent a great deal of time reflecting on my own life, and the events that transpire in it. All I can say is that I will do my best not to transipre suffering on the world. So far, I don't seem to be doing such a good job.
Sinn Fein (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, I used the wrong link before. I meant to link to the actual interview [sundaymirror.co.uk] with bin Laden's son.
He says "My father believes American spies have joined the Taliban He talks in a code that even I can't understand".
It's not that he's speaking, it's that he's (likely) conveying another message besides the obvious one.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, it's highly likely. Winston Churchill did it during WWII with his radio announcements. They contained a predefined trigger to coordinate the release of toops during certain battle arrangements.
Let's all stop and think about this for a meaning. I wish to send an important secret message to my evil henchmen on another continent. Do I send an encrypted letter? Do I send a human messenger by plane to carry the message? Do I phone them and use secret phrases with hidden meanings to convey the message to them?
All of these are immediately noticeable if you are under surveillance. It's best to use something that is "not quite what it seems" as a method of communication.
hope that the corporate minions of the Great Satan will transmit your message, complete, clear (no poorly translated voice-overs, if you please) and in a timely fashion.
Actually, a voice over won't matter. If they use the same basic imagery when translated to English, the message would still be clear. It has been noted that Bin Laden frequently uses interesting combinations of imagery in his words during the few public releases he has. As far as timely release? Come on. Our news hounds are constantly striving to be the first to release such things. I would say that Osama could absolutely count on it being delivered almost immediately.
The most clever way to plan during a "war" is to act with utter simplicity.
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:3, Insightful)
The message could be conveyed in something as simple as manner of dress or a key phrase. It could be "encoded" in where Bin Ladens gun rests in the background behind him in the shot.... or the even who sits to his right or left.
The plans were made a long time ago. Messages from Bin Laden to his people are likely of no more granulairty than "continue as planned" or "halt and wait" or "go with plan B"
Or even more specific... "transmit orders for plan B"... I think its very likely that Bin Laden, being a figurehead, has probably delegated the actual planning and coordination to someone else, so anything from him only has to be very very high level...which is where this sort of messahe excells.
That said... I think its silly to believe that they don't have operations setup such as to continue even if the communication channel is cutoff. All that censoring him does is stop americans from hearing what he has to say.
-Steve
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, except for... (Score:2)
If you live in Saudi Arabia, your corrupt government is upheld by US troops in the country. Saudis don't get to choose whether they want to be ruled by a corrupt "Royal Family". The US has chosen for them.
As for the US being the "most hideous" - I doubt it. But the accusation I will certainly make is: The US has not lived up to its ideals. For the amount of blood and money we have spent around the world, we could have created many strong, stable democracies. Instead we acted in the short-term interests of US corporations.
Not exactly "in the wild" (Score:5, Informative)
Preview is my friend (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Preview is my friend (Score:2, Funny)
;o)
Re:[OT] Hunter Thompson... Why? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Is it some sort of MTV-esque "Look at how bad I am, I like Thompson!' thing?
Perhaps partially. I admire and respect Thompson because gonzo journalism was, at its onset, a new and refreshing change from more traditional reporting styles. It was a partially successful experiment, and worthy of trying.
But perhaps more importantly I admire anyone who is able to flagrantly flout society's conventions and morality and be successful doing so. Since the mainstream media continues to hound upon the virtues of leading a pure and chaste life, it is refreshing to have someone show that extreme debauchery does not necessarily lead to a life of tragedy, if you are smart about it. I don't consider him a "drug crazy retard", but a journalist who has pursued (and abandoned) some interesting styles and who is a better-than-average writer.
What have you read by him?
Re:Not exactly "in the wild" (Score:3, Interesting)
new abc worm scans users hard drive for images with secret messages, sends email to FBI
Re:Not exactly "in the wild" (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not exactly "in the wild" (Score:2)
at the risk of sounding stupid. (Score:1, Offtopic)
what exactly is the purpose of this. After perusing the site i'm not exactly sure what the purpose of this is. at first i thought it was related to terrorist hiding information in images on the internet. can someone shed some light of this situation.
Re:at the risk of sounding stupid. (Score:5, Interesting)
Therefore, we are going to get very worried about, and pass lots of laws concerning, ultra-sophisticated encryption technology that no evil-doer would ever touch due to (a) complexity (b) potential to stand out like a sore thumb.
Clear now?
sPh
Oh come on now. (Score:2)
These "antiterrorist" laws are nothing more than the standard antiprivacy "pro law" items that certain elements have been trying to get for years. Now they have a window of opportunity to ram them through.
If passed the average person convicted of a crime using the antiterrorist rules will be high school kids selling pot or dicking with their school's chess club web page.
They know damn well that these provisions won't really let them watch terrorists, but it will sure as hell let them watch YOU!
KFG
I found the message! (Score:5, Funny)
yay. It only took me 10s w/Netscape to find the message
wow (Score:1, Funny)
Oh great... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Oh great... (Score:5, Funny)
Now I'm beginning to see how evil and subversive those Find the Hidden Picture's were in Highlights Magazine I read as a child! See what diabolical effect it's had on my effort to draw a picture of a simple emoticon!
cccccccccccccccccccc
cccccc/ccccccccEcccc
ccccc/ccc====ccAcJcc
cccc|ccccccccccTcOcc
cccc|cccc====ccccEcc
ccccc\cccccccccAc'cc
cccccc\ccccccccTcScc
cccccccccccccccccccc
The horror, the horror!
This lends weight to... (Score:1, Funny)
If I told you.... (Score:1, Interesting)
-russ
Nothing to see here.... move along (Score:2, Funny)
But if you look at the Slashdot image: http://images.slashdot.org/title.gif you'll see cmdrtaco and cowboyneal with pasty white bodies on the well tanned French Riviera.
Super Troll (Score:4, Redundant)
Someone please take this article out. It's an embarassment.
No suprise (Score:5, Insightful)
In the wild denotes actual use by thrid parties.. A virus in the wild means it's out there looking to do damage and infect, This image is the equilivant of a hello world program on a how to program website.
It's not in the wild, It's an example placed by ABC news.
hmm (Score:2, Offtopic)
And the secret message was... (Score:2)
...a sure fire way to crash your webserver.
Is this really in the wild? (Score:2, Informative)
What I would like to see is a truly wild image culled from the net. Unfortunately, it probably would be kiddie porn.....
Still, the test is interesting.
I imagine the next couple images found in the wild (Score:1)
Heh heh. (Score:2)
Heh heh heh.
Not a very good algorithm / implementation (Score:5, Insightful)
Good stego should be undetectable -- first off, the hidden message should be encrypted, and therefore nearly indistinguishable from any other set of random numbers. Also, the message needs to be several orders of magnitude smaller than the carrier image -- if you want to hide a 1K message, you ideally want a ~1M image to put it in. Isolating 1K of signal out of 1M of noise would be very computationally difficult.
Re:Not a very good algorithm / implementation (Score:5, Interesting)
Stego detection software makes me laugh, it will only detect morons and idiots, and if you really worry about detection increast the Signal to noise ratio. stego EVERY image you come across with the contents of
I dont care what they develop for detection or interception, anyone with 1/2 a brain can get past them without effort. The difference between a madman and a genius is that a genius won't use his/her knowlege to kill people for sport (or any other reason) The madman looks for any excuse to use his/her knowlege to kill maim or destroy.
Re:Not a very good algorithm / implementation (Score:3, Informative)
Before you berate the clueless programmers, let's see your solution...
Re:Not a very good algorithm / implementation (Score:2)
Statistical Analysis is not needed in this case. Flooding the detectors is a well known and a method that does not need any analysis or focus groups to look at. If you cause a giant chunk of images to have false positives then the real positive detection will go un-noticed or ignored. It's a simple microbiological method, Testing for e-coli is a specific and narrow band test.. If I throw in staph and a ton of interference then the e-coli test can no longer be trusted and any positive results must be discarded or ignored.
you can be as clever as you want, but if I dump 20 million images in your lap that will set off your detector, but only 100 contain real information... I just defeated you with no effort other than writing a 15 line perl script. By the time you find my 100 real messages it will be too late.
How am I going to put a ton of images out that are false positives? simple perl script that starts yanking images off the web, shovel's
Re:Not a very good algorithm / implementation (Score:5, Informative)
If you have an image and you store the encrypted message in the low order bits of the image then they will look too random when compared to typical images.
Dont use naive implementations (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not a very good algorithm / implementation (Score:2)
Yes, that is right. However, that is not the correct way of hiding information in images. What you should rather do is match the distribution of the encrypted data to the noise characteristics of a known, plausible source (e.g., a CCD camera). Alternatively, you just make sure that you encode at a bit rate that is low enough not to change the noise characteristics of the image detectably. Either is easy to do.
Re:Not a very good algorithm / implementation (Score:2)
The key was so poorly chosen that many would be able to *guess* it before the couple of seconds it took a computer to "brute force" it, if you can call coming up with "abc" as requiring brute force.
The coolest thing to come out of this though is the fact that literally millions of people who had never heard of steganography before have now not only heard of it, they've had it explained to them in detail.
Expect trivial usage, and thus the signal to noise ratio, to soar, making the technique far more useful for actually hiding information.
KFG
Re:Not a very good algorithm / implementation (Score:2)
You should use the much more secure method of XORing it with 0xFEEDFACEDEADBEEF instead.
Even if... (Score:1)
-Jon
Matter of opinion of course, (Score:5, Insightful)
but I'm kinda bothered by this sort of thing, not in the way some might think. I don't have any problem at all with the research being conducted (actually I support it, good stuff!), but I hate that gobs of bandwidth are wasted by this sort of thing.
I mean, how much bandwidth is taken from companies with large numbes of images on their sites (EBay for example) as a results of stuff like this? It's not exactly something you can say adheres to purely ethical use of their bandwidth.
There's got be lots of projects out there attempting this stuff, especially given recent press coverage on the topic. Who's picking up the tab for the network usage?
Perhaps a permission-based scheme would be better, or better yet a volunteer-supported test server pool dedicated to hosting images. That way, people could test out steganography techniques by posting their images to the pool for the community at large to take a crack at. Thoughts? Flames? Oranges?
Re:Matter of opinion of course, (Score:2)
_cough_
Re:Matter of opinion of course, (Score:3, Insightful)
I admit there may be a huge glut bandwidth being used in the research, but it's just a fact of life on the internet.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:MOD PARENT UP! (Score:4, Funny)
But, eBay did grant permission for the download. Somebody's client said "GET http://www.ebay.com/image/something", and eBay said "OK, here it is, catch!". If they didn't want to spend the bandwidth to send it to you, they shouldn't have done so. At no point did eBay not have a choice.
You may think I'm being needlessly literal here (and in a sense I am), but really this points out the fact that HTTP isn't a suitable protocol to use if you want to shape and/or limit your traffic in certain non-basic ways like eBay does. Not that I'm in favor of traffic limitations, though - anyone who can type a /. comment in less than 20 seconds will agree with me there :)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:MOD PARENT UP! (Score:2, Insightful)
If I did that in your office, then I would be trespassing. If you left your computer set up on a busy city street, with a big red "Delete" button to push, then it would appear to me and an average passerby that file deletion was OK with you. Thus also with files on servers on the 'net. Your machine does not have power of attorney, but if you set up an automatic file dispenser, you can't complain if people take files off of it, any more than you could complain if people took all the gumballs out of a free gumball machine that you set up. Of course, the eBay example is a little different than the gumball or "Delete" analogies, because eBay didn't run out of files, although they may have been marginally lower on server capacity and bandwidth at the time.
Ah, but that's exactly my point - one straw at a time is OK, it's the overall pattern of straw usage that McD's should worry about. They would want to either alter their straw dispensers, or more likely just toss you out if you started doing that. The dispensers themselves aren't labeled "only take what you need" - how many times have you seen people take twice as many napkins or packets of ketchup than they need?
If the company didn't want their machine to post the files, why didn't they just tell it not to? If they set up an automatic process that affects their property and is freely available to the public, why shouldn't they be liable for what happens to it?
I think of a server as sort of a secretary. If you told your secretary to accept file submissions and store them on a global bulletin board, and she didn't know any better than to take pr0n too, then the failure is really in your instructions. What is needed is a more sophisticated way to describe to a web server what access patterns are acceptable, just like you would tell your secretary to only accept files with a legitimate business purpose. You can continue to curse the pranksters that keep submitting polaroids of women with Shetland ponies, but in the end you can't track them all down. You have to fix the problem at the source.
You haven't been reading the news much, have you? MP3 trading continues, DeCSS can be had for a 2-second Google search, software piracy flourishes - plenty of examples haven't really helped those issues. These are situations where you can't police everybody in the world at once, if not due to the unending variety of local law, then due to the sheer expense that would be required to do so. The only way to solve an Internet-scale problem is with a distributed technological solution.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:MOD PARENT UP! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
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Re:Matter of opinion of course, (Score:2, Informative)
Publicity from first search salted the earth (Score:4, Insightful)
No doubt a fair proportion of them contain spook words too.
Re:Publicity from first search salted the earth (Score:3, Insightful)
Future searches will find that very difficult because publicity from the first search has meant (in all likelihood) that thousands of new stego images have sprung up, effectively making new searches pointless. Yes you'll find stego but it wouldn't prove or disprove anything except that people are having fun downloading and trying out stego software. In other words, the publicity from the first search has salted the earth for future searches.
It cannot wok in general. (Score:1, Interesting)
How do I create Steganographic Files? (Score:1)
Do the tools cost money? Are they easy to use?
Any experienced people, please respond...?
Re:How do I create Steganographic Files? (Score:2, Informative)
In the wild... (Score:1, Funny)
DMCA (Score:5, Funny)
Unless of course they have a warrant, or the US government implements some more 1984 laws.
where did they find teh image ? (Score:1)
Or did they use the known image from the ABC show and decoded it ?
Its less interesting if they already knew about the image, than to have found one out of millions of random images.
My Aunts were confused by the ABC news coverage (Score:2, Interesting)
Two of my aunts mentioned the coverage on ABC [go.com]. They thought that the demonstration images shown had actually been found and related to the terrorist strikes. I didn't actually see the broadcast, but the two ladies involved aren't stupid. It must have been pretty misleading coverage to give them that impression.
Did anyone actually see the story when it was broadcast and can comment on it?
And this proves what, precisely? (Score:5, Insightful)
Eventually they get told that yes, there is a steganographic image on ABC, and they look at it, and guess what? They prove that it is a steganographic image and they can really desteg it. Quel surprise!
Of course, this particular image was very simply constructed as an example for a mass entertainment news channel intended for a general, non-specialist, audience. It was not constructed by someone concerned about secrecy or desperate to conceal a secret message. On the contrary it was constructed using handy, freely available steganographic image tools, not special purpose custom written ones.
Great!
This doesn't prove that there aren't staganographic images on eBay which their software can't detect. It doesn't prove there aren't steganographic images on alt.sex.binaries.fluffy-bunnies. It doesn't prove there aren't steganographic images on your favourite pr0n site.
It doesn't even prove that some spook agency somewhere can't detect all these steganographic messages, desteg them, and read the payload. All it proves is that these two academics can only detect a steganographic image it they're told where it is and what it is, and even then only if it's produced with a small range of well known, freely available tools.
Incidentally, there is a steganographic payload in this post. Care to scan all Slashdot posts for steganographic payload? All Usenet? No, thought not.
Distributed Computing Project? (Score:3, Interesting)
Considering the importance of this project and the number of images provided on the web, would it be possible for this project, or maybe another, to go to a distributed computing model (@home) ?
Computing power (Score:3, Interesting)
Wow! That is amazing (Score:4, Funny)
I just kept staring at it and staring at it....
Information *hiding* (Score:2, Interesting)
The purpose of steganography is information hiding . An information hiding method that reveals more than random noise to an observer is broken. The only thing that can be deducted from a properly encoded steganographic message is the presence of (seemingly) random noise modulated on top of an information carrier. Claim: Encryption is a requirement in order to properly implement information hiding, otherwise one simply ends up with two images/message on top of each other.
There is no way anybody that is serious about information hiding (and we all know who that could be...) will resort to simply mixing two picture sources using [choose your favourite modulation scheme here].
This is also why it is so easy to detect and remove a known watermark from documents. (And certain unknown ones as well, as demonstrated by Felten & Co)
So, while scanning the net can be useful for detecting broken applications of steganography, it will hardly reveal interesting information. (note: "Application" here refers to "method" or "usage" and not necessarily to the software performing the modulation.)
Well.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Any real stego you wanted to hide would also be encrypted. Strongly. So all you would find is noise.
Detection Methods (Score:3, Informative)
While it is very easy to change an algorithm by byte offset, this is NOT the method of detection being used.
The method of detection exploits the characteristics of the JPEG compression algorithm to detect non-naturally occuring deviations in the image file. An example of this would be the gamma balance which is averaged over a certain number of pixels. In order to "hide" a change to a single bit, another bit would need to be inversely modified such that the balance of the image remains within or close to natural balance.
Steganographic content in Pictures vs. Streams (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmph (Score:2, Interesting)
Been making it as obvious as possible, only to discover that the "I thought it was obvious" password was too tough for the U Mich guys to break with their dictionary attack.
Just me jammin', trying to stir up trouble in the name of liberty and other outmoded concepts.
More relevant than you think. (Score:3, Insightful)
What does this really mean? Perhaps finding well hidden messages is a hell of a lot harder than anyone expected- and it will only get harder. If criminals are using this to communicate, they may be justified in feeling safe doing so.
Of course, it is probably a bad idea to put stock in anything that comes from guys trying to grab the spotlight by reporting an image created by abc news as a steganographic image found "in the wild." If nothing else it reminds me of idiots who try to get attention reposting known securiuty vulnerabilities to BuqTraq.
For the impatient (Score:2, Redundant)
Future pictures will not be so easy to decifer (Score:2)
So, just d/l outguess-0.2 already (Score:2)
A little cornfusing, but it sounds like they couldn't really find any hidden info IN THE WILD, so ABC creates this image for a stego program and challenges these genie-asses to decode it? Bloody difficult key there, ABC.
Excuse me but this sounds like a police dept. with a bloodhound who couldn't find squat, takes a prisoner, ties a t-bone steak around his neck, puts him in the dog house and says, "Find the criminal, boy! Good dog! Good Doggie!! See what progress we are making in the fight against terrorism?!" while the media are rolling film.
Or they want to justify continued funding for their research on images in alt.binaries.pictures.you.know.what.
Hidden message (Score:2)
3com in league with Bin Laden (Score:2, Interesting)
http://doom.net/pics/3com-shirt.jpg
A-B-C? That's amazing! (Score:2)
Intelligent terrorists would use courier (Score:2)
When not planning face to face, terrorists will just have to send personal couriers - or get caught.
Perhaps give mobile for single message when required - just using message - go with plan a / b or abort.
Government are using terrorism as an excuse - to scare people into supporting them in the monitoring of Internet traffic.
This is all propaganda by government - to invade our basic human right to privacy.
Government say about surveillance - "you've nothing to fear - if you are not breaking the law"
This argument is made to pressure people into acquiesce - else appear guilty of hiding something.
It does not address the real reason, why they want this information - they want a surveillance society.
This is like having somebody watching everything you do - all your thoughts, hopes and fears will be open to them.
All your finances for them to scrutinize - heaven help you if you cannot account for every cent when they check on your taxes.
Do not believe the lies of Government - even more money spent on Carnivore will not protect you.
Incidentally, the United States Department of Commerce and the United Nations World Intellectual Property Organization know the solution to trademark and domain name problems.
You will find it on WIPO.org.uk [wipo.org.uk]