QUOTE
TECSEC, like Secure Computing and many others, believes it is well positioned to ride the market surge. The key will be combining a variety of security techniques from its own R&D labs and from other companies -- access control, user authentication, encryption -- and putting them into a cheap, relatively user-friendly package. Certainly, the company boasts the proper pedigree. Its founder, Ed Scheidt, is also the creator of the Cryptos statue that sits in front of CIA headquarters -- a statue etched with an encrypted message by Scheidt that has yet to be cracked.
QUOTE
CBS Evening News for Friday, Apr 05, 1991
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Headline: CIA / Sculpture
Abstract: (Studio: Mike Wallace) Report introduced.
(CIA: Rita Braver) Cryptos sculpture, commissioned for CIA headquarters, featured; sculptor Jim Sanborn noted revealing coded message only to CIA director William Webster; scenes shown. [SANBORN, CIA officer Peter EARNEST - comment on puzzle.]
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Headline: CIA / Sculpture
Abstract: (Studio: Mike Wallace) Report introduced.
(CIA: Rita Braver) Cryptos sculpture, commissioned for CIA headquarters, featured; sculptor Jim Sanborn noted revealing coded message only to CIA director William Webster; scenes shown. [SANBORN, CIA officer Peter EARNEST - comment on puzzle.]
QUOTE
The statue Cryptos at the CIA building for instance
has a coded message on it that has never been broken. But if may fall under
the one-time pad category. No one knows and the creator won't say.
has a coded message on it that has never been broken. But if may fall under
the one-time pad category. No one knows and the creator won't say.
QUOTE
For 15 years, a bronze sculpture in the CIA's courtyard has taunted amateur and professional code-breakers alike. Kryptos is a copper wall that features four long coded passages. Cryptographers from the National Security Administration and the CIA have cracked the first three.
But it's been six years since anyone reported progress, and sculptor Jim Sanborn claims to be the only man alive who knows the solution. Meanwhile, thriller writer Dan Brown is stoking interest: The dust jacket for his The Da Vinci Code featured clues hinting at Kryptos's significance, and Brown has suggested his next novel may somehow feature it.
Around the world, fans of puzzles and codes are racing to solve Kryptos. A Yahoo discussion group devoted to the puzzle, now boasting 500 members, is growing.
But it's been six years since anyone reported progress, and sculptor Jim Sanborn claims to be the only man alive who knows the solution. Meanwhile, thriller writer Dan Brown is stoking interest: The dust jacket for his The Da Vinci Code featured clues hinting at Kryptos's significance, and Brown has suggested his next novel may somehow feature it.
Around the world, fans of puzzles and codes are racing to solve Kryptos. A Yahoo discussion group devoted to the puzzle, now boasting 500 members, is growing.
QUOTE
All Things Considered, August 26, 1999 · Linda reports on the deciphering of an unusual sort of CIA code -- a secret message built into Kryptos, a sculptured fountain at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. The code was cut into a copper scroll by the sculptor, James Sanborn, and remained unsolved for eight years. Parts of the code have now been broken by David Stein, a Senior Analyst at the CIA. But the last 97 characters still remain a mystery.
[quote]The Fourth Passage
The significance of the initial question-mark character -- as a beginning or a spacer -- is hotly debated by Kryptos sleuths.
?OBKRUOXOGHULBSOLIFBBWFL
RVQQPRNGKSSOTWTQSJQSSEK
ZZWATJKLUDIAWINFBNYPVTTM
ZFPKWGDKZXTJCDIGKUHUAUEK
CAR
Note:There are no breaks in the sequence.
http://elonka.com/kryptos/index.html#spoilers
http://www.elonka.com/kryptos/mirrors/daw/steinarticle.html
I guess I have to wait until I get a reply before I can post the solution to the first part. It keeps placing me inside this first post.
