Codebreaker: The History of Secret Communication

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Bloomsbury Publishing USA, Oct 3, 2006 - Computers - 176 pages

From the time of the ancient pharaohs to the modern world of Internet banking, civilization has relied on codes and ciphers to keep its secrets. The 4,000-year history of cryptography has been a kind of arms race: Each time a more complex encryption has been developed, it has been attacked and, more often than not, decoded; and each time, in response, codemakers have produced tougher and tougher codes. Codebreaker surveys the entire history of codes through an eloquent narrative and an evocative range of illustrations, paying special attention to famous codes that have never been broken, such as the Beale Ciphers, the Voynich manuscript, the Easter Island code, and many more. Many great names in history appear throughout, from Caesar and Mary Queen of Scots, to Samuel Morse and Alan Turing. The narrative is based in part on interviews with cryptology experts, Navaho windtalkers, decryption experts, and law enforcement experts, and ends with a vision of the coded future via quantum cryptography.

 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
8
Sheer bloodymindedness helped crack Enigma and other wartime
91
The Enigma machine
102
Purple
116
CHAPTER 5
127
The Zodiac Killer 132 Specific Codes Cracking Poes
146
The cat came back 154 Specific Codes Quantum
158
Quantum cryptography in a box of chocolates
166
GLOSSARY
172
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Stephen Pincock is a news editor for The Scientist magazine, and a science columnist for the Financial Times magazine. A trained biochemist and science journalist, Pincock has long had a fascination for deciphering codes and for the history of espionage. He has written widely about the history and development of cryptology, technology, and science.

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