| bio | website | colingreenstuff.org |
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| location | England, United Kingdom | |
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 5 months |
| seen | Nov 27 '12 at 12:21 | |
| stats | profile views | 0 |
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Nov 27 |
comment |
Cracking WWII-era codes - code found on a pigeon's leg in Surrey I'm agreeing with you. If you take the strict definition of one-time-pad then yes, but we don't know that it is a one time pad by that definition, that's essentially the thought train I'm following here. We don't know for sure that it's a random pad at all in fact - it's highly likely but not certain. |
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Nov 27 |
comment |
Cracking WWII-era codes - code found on a pigeon's leg in Surrey Sure, I'll improve the wording accordingly. The point remains that a random pad, if repeated, may be breakable. Though in this case the message is very short, therefore it's very likely to have been covered by a single pad. |
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Nov 26 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Nov 26 |
answered | Cracking WWII-era codes - code found on a pigeon's leg in Surrey |
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Nov 26 |
awarded | Supporter |