Click here to Skip to main content
Licence 
First Posted 14 Feb 2005
Views 24,172
Bookmarked 10 times

Biological Studies as the Basis of Encryption

By | 14 Feb 2005 | Article
Encryption methods using biological basis. As with many technologies, the first announcements do not make many waves and it takes time for the mainstream media to understand the significance of such announcements and separate them from all the other noise.

As with many technologies, the first announcements do not make many waves and it takes time for the mainstream media to understand the significance of such announcements and separate them from all the other noise. Maybe its because current encryption standards are so strong that the significance of this item has not been understood yet.

Let's take a quick review of the state of encryption today. Today several encryption methods exist and through increasing the key sizes it makes it virtually impossible to crack them, or at least so hard that only a very determined government could even muster enough computer resources to crack a message. But while unlikely to be in the Hollywood fashion, some day there WILL be breakthroughs in encryption algorithm cracking less fantastic but similar to seen in the movie Sneakers. In the movie Sneakers a chip is invented which can crack any encryption. Certainly I do not expect we will see such an advance, or that such an advance is even likely in the near term future. But less general and more specific techniques will be discovered just as breakthroughs in mathematics are occasionally discovered, and in fact breakthroughs in mathematics are exactly what are needed since encryption is based on mathematics.

When these breakthroughs occur, existing encryption methods will fall prey to unwanted decryption and increasing key size will not help. Current cracking generally relies on brute force attacks so bigger keys make the amount of computing resources needed impractical. But if the general algorithm is cracked, then increasing the key size will not affect the required computing resources very much.

What is unique about this new type of encryption is that the algorithm is uniquely different. The algorithm is based on a relatively unknown area of scientific study called Natural Algorithm Studies. Natural Algorithm Studies studies nature and finds useful algorithms in nature. This technique is not new, and nature is famous for creating useful patters such as crystals, sand grain pyramids, and more. What is new, is the application of this technique to encryption science. The source of this new technique is hundreds of thousands of years old and proven by nature itself.

With public key encryption such as PGP, anyone who has a public key can encrypt something that only the intended person with the matching private key can decrypt. This new natural encryption has similar attributes, but works a little differently. This natural encryption contains two groups (M and WOM) and thus the algorithms have been tentatively named M-Encoding and WOM-Encoding. Data encrypted by the M group can only be decrypted by other M group types with the proper keys. And the same holds true for the WOM group.

What is unique is that the encryption produces output that appears to be valid to the other group, yet when decrypted produces invalid output, yet it appears valid. Thats the unique capability – its false flag or camouflage ability!

So if someone tries to decrypt a M type message using a WOM type they will get a message which they think is valid, yet it is false. And because of the rules of nature, it is absolutely impossible for a M group to ever read a WOM group message successfully, or a WOM group to read a M group message.

What strange algorithm of nature is this new encryption based on? Well its based on the human brain speech center. Take a bit closer look at the M and WOM group names: Mencoding and Womencoding.

While some have claimed to crack this encryption, none have been truly successful and those that have are just looking for headlines. Any one of us who is married or has a significant other knows full well that when the encryption of the sexes is turned on – it is purely undecipherable and no force on earth will ever crack it.

Here is a small example found on the internet:

Wife: Go and buy sausage. If they have eggs. buy ten.
Programmer goes to store: Do you have eggs?
Storekeeper: Yes.
Programmer: Then give me ten sausages.

That's my thought for the day. Hope you enjoyed it. Happy decrypting! :)

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.

A list of licenses authors might use can be found here

About the Author

Chad Z. Hower aka Kudzu

Other

Cyprus Cyprus

Member

Chad Z. Hower, a.k.a. Kudzu
"Programming is an art form that fights back"
Website: http://www.KudzuWorld.com
Blogspace: http://www.KudzuWorld.com/blogs/
Speaking Profile: http://www.woo-hoo.net/
 
Formerly the Regional Developer Adviser (DPE) for Microsoft MEA (Middle East and Africa), he was responsible for 85 countries spanning 4 continents and crossing 10 time zones. Now Chad is Microsoft MVP and a professional speaker at popular developer conferences worldwide. Chad was once introduced as having "mastered more languages than a United Nations translator." Chad is the author of the book Indy in Depth and has contributed to several other books on network communications and general programming. Chad has lived in Canada, Cyprus, Switzerland, France, Jordan, Russia, Turkey, and the United States. In total Chad has visited more than 50 countries, visiting most of them many times.

Sign Up to vote   Poor Excellent
Add a reason or comment to your vote: x
Votes of 3 or less require a comment

Comments and Discussions

 
You must Sign In to use this message board. (secure sign-in)
 
Search this forum  
 FAQ
    Noise  Layout  Per page   
  Refresh
QuestionWhere's the beef!? PinmemberAlan C. Balkany3:04 24 Feb '05  
AnswerRe: Where's the beef!? PinmemberChad Z. Hower aka Kudzu3:17 24 Feb '05  
I agree. I put it in the closest category available:
"The Scrapbook"
 
Chad Z. Hower, a.k.a. Kudzu
"Programming is an art form that fights back"
 
My Technical Stuff:
http://www.hower.org/Kudzu/
 
My Software Blog:
http://blogs.atozed.com/kudzu/category/11.aspx

GeneralNice waste of 5 min of my life ! PinmemberDan Clark16:55 14 Feb '05  
GeneralRelated example PinmemberDon Clugston16:01 14 Feb '05  
GeneralRe: Related example PinmemberChad Z. Hower aka Kudzu16:10 14 Feb '05  
GeneralRe: Related example PinmemberJonathan C Dickinson1:43 12 May '09  
GeneralIn other words ... PinmemberChris Meech2:46 14 Feb '05  

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.

Permalink | Advertise | Privacy | Mobile
Web01 | 2.5.120528.1 | Last Updated 14 Feb 2005
Article Copyright 2005 by Chad Z. Hower aka Kudzu
Everything else Copyright © CodeProject, 1999-2012
Terms of Use
Layout: fixed | fluid