With any luck we will finally
decode the body of ciphers that have been floating around for centuries
sometimes and end the speculation that they naturally accrue. The amount of human effort they have
attracted has never been justified in real terms and I am sure their
decipherment will be a disappointment.
The sooner done the better in
fact.
Reconstructing ancient alphabets
and their texts is a much more promising problem.
Researchers crack 300-year-old German code
AFP – Thu, 27 Oct, 2011
US and Swedish researchers have cracked the code of the 300-year-old Copiale
Cipher with the help of a new computer program that may help to decipher other
legendary secretive manuscripts.
"This opens up a window for people who study the history of ideas
and the history of secret societies," computer scientist Kevin Knight of
the University of
Southern California said
in a statement Wednesday.
"Historians believe that secret societies have had a role in
revolutions, but all that is yet to be worked out, and a big part of the reason
is because so many documents are enciphered."
The 75,000-character Copiale Cipher describes the rituals and political
leanings of an 18th-century German secret society, which bound the manuscript
in gold and green brocade paper, the USC statement said.
The rituals, encoded in a series of abstract symbols interspersed with
Greek and Roman characters, indicate that the secretive group had a fascination
with eye surgery but that members were not actually eye doctors.
Knight, along with Beata Megyesi and Christiane Schaefer of Uppsala University
in Sweden ,
used a computer program designed to help quantify the recurrence of certain
symbols and identify other patterns.
"When you get a new code and look at it, the possibilities are
nearly infinite," Knight said. "Once you come up with a hypothesis
based on your intuition as a human, you can turn over a lot of grunt work to
the computer."
Knight's team initially thought the message was contained in the Greek
and Roman characters, but after the computer program disproved that hypothesis,
they shifted their attention to the abstract characters, eventually translating
the German words for "Ceremonies of Initiation" and "Secret
Section."
Knight plans to target other famous coded messages, including the
ciphers sent by the Zodiac Killer, an American serial murderer in the 1960s and
early 1970s who sent cryptic messages to the press and has never been caught.
He also wants to try the program out on "Kryptos," an
encrypted message carved on a sculpture at CIA headquarters, and the medieval
Voynich Manuscript, considered among the most mysterious manuscripts ever
found.
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