British WW II Codebook Online 37
An A.C. pointed out
Keith Lockstone's website
which contains a complete scan of the Second World War codebook
"British Cypher No. 5." An interesting look into history.
"...when on 10 June [1943] the Admiralty at last replaced Naval Cipher No. 3 with No. 5, which proved quite
secure, it was plain that the U-boats could never regain their former authority."
Re:Interesting(OT) (Score:1)
Re:On a more serious note... (Score:2)
If everybody downloaded a copy of a crypto system that was the same, and used it without providing random data all copies would scramble exactly the same way.
The German Enigma cipher only used enough random data to produce about 19600-531400 possible unique keys.
The theoretical random setting of three or four rotors each having 27 characters of the alphabet provided the random factor. The rest of the enigma machine was hardwired and would substitute characters in a fixed knowable way.
Minimal contemporary crypto systems use enough random data to produce at least 2^72 unique keys. As technology is bringing the cost of cracking these systems lower and lower these large numbers will soon seem ridiculously small.
It could be argued that many contemporary crypto systems use pseudorandom data to encrypt. Often times the actual number of likely keys produced is a subset of the theoretical number possible.
Re:very interesting, but... (Score:1)
Not true at all. The Japanese had basically no success cracking any Allied codes except for low-level weather codes. Whereas their codes were mostly an open book.
The Navajo "code-talkers" were an excellent innovation, though, because (a) the language is obscure and has a very strange structure, with no native speakers available to the Japanese, and (b) they allowed for quick communication with no encryption/decryption time lag.
A good source on this is a book called Combined Fleet Decoded, about the intel war in the Pacific.
-Doug
Re:On a more serious note... (Score:1)
Re:Warning? Come on, man... (Score:1)
...and even Stop/Back are a bit sluggish to respond
Re:very interesting, but... (Score:1)
| speakers of Navajo left in the world.
As others have pointed out, this is simply false. If you live in the western half of the USA or Mexico, simply tune your AM radio to KTNN [navajoland.com], 660 kHz. at night to hear Navajo music, news, sports, and the like. I sincerely doubt a 50,000 watt station would last long with only 60 listeners!
Earl Higgins
Re:PDF alternative and copyrights (Score:2)
Much handier than printing out a couple dozen GIFs :-)
Best,
Adam
Flaw in the Cipher (Score:2)
The number tables exhibit a weakness that is best explained by this article [newscientist.com] on the New Scientist Web Site [newscientist.com].
Benford's Law (see the above article) states that given a random assortment of real-world numbers, 30% will start with a 1, 18% start with a 2 and so forth. Because the table lists the same number of values for each number, it follows that the numbers beginning with '1' will be used a lot more. Although unlikely, this may compromise the security of the code if it is used to encrypt numbers extensively.
You can check Benford's Law for yourself. Try it with share prices; career earnings of sportspeople, movie stars or racehorses; areas or populations of countries; all real-world numbers on the first 10 pages of any newspaper; and so on.
Because Benford's Law wasn't discovered until after the cipher was created, it is understandable that the cipher did not allow for this odd property of numbers.
--
very interesting, but... (Score:2)
--
Matt Singerman
One implication... (Score:2)
WARNING!!:DONT ACCESS THE LINK IF.... (Score:2)
The scanned images (each 200-800K) take fscking ages to upload and jammed my browser (Netscape) for a while.
Not all of us have DSL or Cable modems
On a more serious note... (Score:1)
Copyright violation? (Score:1)
Even if the book wasn't copyrighted in the U.S., supposedly the Sonny Bono-named copyright extension was "to bring us in line with European convention" which is life plus 70 years, right?
Jay (=
(As the Boston Globe article [boston.com] says, copyright extensions do more than protect "Steamboat Willie"...)
Re:One implication... (Score:1)
jsm
Re:very interesting, but... (Score:2)
There's more info at the Navy's History site:
http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq61 -2.htm [navy.mil]
They've even got the Navajo dictionary. Turns out that the system was more than just the Navajo language and a few code words, since even a captured Navajo couldn't decipher it.
Most interesting (Score:2)
This is doubtless not proof against the serious cryptographers of the NSA, but it would be most entertaining to have a PalmPilot utility for it...
Warning? Come on, man... (Score:1)
1. The story says that the codebook is scanned. Hello? Know what a scanner is?
2. There's a nifty button on Netscape and Explorer called Stop. There's another one called Back. I'm sure anyone who finds the download too long can hit either of them and don't need someone writing an alarming title as if the site contained a virus or something.
I say starve the karma monster.
"The wages of sin is death but so is the salary of virtue, and at least the evil get to go home early on Fridays."
What they don't tell you... (Score:2)
(Windows 95 is banned, under the Geneva Convention.)
Seriously, can someone add this to the International Patches, just for the fun of it? :) (Ok, well, maybe not so seriously, then! :)
Re:One implication... (Score:1)
Public key crypto is good! (Score:1)
Interesting (Score:1)
Re:WARNING!!:DONT ACCESS THE LINK IF.... (Score:1)
Re:very interesting, but... (Score:1)
Re:Flaw in the Cipher (Score:1)
As a simplistic example if you were to assign an LED to each position in a ciphertext, then try each possible key turning on LEDs only when the character assigned is equal to a space..
N0typinglik3thiswouldn'thelpth3s3syst3msar3much
Re:One implication... (Score:1)
All that "Computer Scientist" stuff was just a cover. He was actually an agent sent from the far future to prevent the 1965 nuclear exchange between a downtrodden US and a Nazi controlled Europe.
The Code Book (Score:2)
RIGHT NOW and buy "The Code Book" by Singh. It
details the complete history of Codes and Ciphers
and includes many great examples of how they
were used/cracked. Amazing read!
Re:PDF alternative and copyrights (Score:1)
Re:Navajo language is not becoming extinct! (Score:1)
They must not be using their codebreaking machines to run this site, as it seems the /. Effect has struck again. :-)
PDF alternative and copyrights (Score:3)
Second, BEWARE. This page is lame - all gifs on a single page, and they are HUGE. For my own purposes I downloaded them with wget, converted to ps and finally produced one single PDF file. You can download it here [uni-heidelberg.de]. This is my student account, and in Germany, so if someone can put it for all the slashdotters in USA on an american server and notify me I would be grateful.
Regards,
January
Re:One implication... (Score:1)
Navajo language is not becoming extinct! (Score:2)
I suspect you have confused the Navajo with some other Native American tribe, as the Navajo are not nearly extinct but are, in fact, the largest tribe in the US.
The Navajo live in the Four Corners region of the southwest (the intersection of Utah, Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico) on a large reservation. You can easily find their reservation on a map of Arizona.
While the Navajo population had been reduced to about eight thousand after the United States' war with them -- run by the infamous Colonel Christopher "Kit" Carson -- concluded in 1864, their numbers greatly recovered upon their return to northern Arizona. They are now the largest Native American tribe, having approximately ninety thousand members according to the 1990 census. And they continue to speak Navajo.
You can read a very short discussion of the Navajo code talkers on the NSA Museum's page at www.nsa.gov/museum/talkers.html [nsa.gov].
If you are interested in general information about the Navajo, including their history and rituals, check out: www.ancestral.com/cultur es/north_america/navajo.html [ancestral.com].