Description:
Disappearing Cryptography, by Peter Wayner, asks what happens after you use encryption to encode your data. After all, encryption doesn't protect you from a jammed transmission, a diverted e-mail message, or an erased file. The gobbledygook that is encrypted data often attracts attention. But there are ways to hide data so that no one knows it's there. Wayner carefully walks the reader through the fundamentals of encryption, error correction, secret sharing, compression, and grammar. Each technique builds on the next until you are able to pull off some impressive tricks using these technologies. You can secret your journals in a picture of your dog or encode your financials as a baseball announcer's monologue. Each chapter begins with a clever anecdote or game that introduces the subject (sometimes elliptically, which is only appropriate for a book on data hiding). A plain-language description of the technology follows, and each chapter finishes with mathematically rigorous proofs and solutions. If you are a newcomer, you will enjoy the new ideas, though you will have to trust that the technology works. If you understand some of what's going on, you will appreciate the new information and applications, as well as the in-depth descriptions of the technologies. And if you are an expert, you will still certainly find something to take away from Wayner's clever way of integrating ideas, which at times recalls Douglas R. Hofstedter's Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid.
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