Contest To Crack William Gibson Poem Agrippa 102
An anonymous reader writes "A new cracking contest to cryptanalyse a William Gibson poem. The electronic poem ('Agrippa') was written back in 1992 and self-encrypts after being displayed once. The person who successfully cracks the encryption will win a copy of every published Gibson book."
The poem/program binary was recovered in 2008, but it looks like no one has managed (bothered?) to crack the code.
Well , I looked at it twice... (Score:5, Informative)
... and it was still the same. Perhaps the 1992 tech doesn't work in my shiny new HTML5 browser? ;o)
Re:Well , I looked at it twice... (Score:5, Informative)
Crappy summary. The poem is not self-encrypting, rather a program displays the poem once and then encrypts it... it's that program that needs to be cracked. As far as I can tell, the poem itself is just a MacGuffin
Re:Well , I looked at it twice... (Score:5, Informative)
The summary isn't clear. The posting on the web is just the text of the poem. Per the original linked-to summary:
While the text of William Gibson's elusive electronic poem AGRIPPA is widely posted around the Web, it has not been seen in its original incarnation — custom-built software designed to scroll the poem through a single play before encrypting each line with an RSA algorithm — since 1992.
Not encrypted (Score:5, Informative)
According to the diff of the disc image before and after the program runs (http://www.crackingagrippa.net/files/agrippa_diffs.txt) it's perfectly clear that the text is not being encrypted. The listing on the left is after the modification, and the listing on the right is the original disc image. A large portion of the disc (exactly 8,000 contiguous bytes) has been rewritten with only four different bytes: 0x41, 0x43, 0x47, 0x54.
Thus a very significant portion of the original information is lost during the "encryption". It sure looks to me like the program merely overwrites the poem portion of the data with one of four randomly selected bytes. The poem, as listed in HTML on the web page, is 9190 characters, which correlates pretty close with the amount of bytes being modified on the disc image.
Re:What were security standards like in '92? (Score:5, Informative)