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Re: The Curse of the VMS



At 04:14 21/08/01 +0000, Jacques Guy wrote:
Seriously now, let me repeat here what I told
the girl from New Scientist. Our (and their)
failure to decipher the VMS is but a dreadful
indictment on the awful state of what calls itself
linguistics (cryptography, on the contrary, seems
to me a very mature field). The purpose  is not so
much the decipherment of the VMS, as the painful,
groping, slow discovery of the properties of
language.

When she asked me if I thought an individual would wake up one morning with the answer, I replied that I thought it would probably only crack with the combined weight of the world on it.


But now I'm not so sure: I'm going through a period where it gets simpler every time I look at it.

There's a wide gulf between steganography and crypto, and I believe that the VMS' author(s) tried to blend the two, producing a class of text we're simply not used to: and this is what has deceived our modern statistical tools and eyes.

In some ways, all the elements in our modern crypto toolbox - letter analysis, patterns, cribs, pairs of letters - were known by about 1470 (cf. Sicco Simonetti and Leone Battista Alberti). But at the same time (as Rene points out), the dating looks to be pre-Trithemius and pre-Porta, which would argue against complex polyalphabets forming the backbone of the VMS.

I'm 99% certain now that the solution will turn out to be simpler than anyone dares to imagines. :-/

Cheers, .....Nick Pelling.....