The problem:
When I'm writing or reading information (be it on a screen or a physical medium) the information is vulnerable. So long as I'm not alone, anyone can simply glance at my screen or journal and instantly read what's written there (like addresses, phone numbers, and plaintext passwords/device pins)
My goal:
I want to create/utilize some sort of text-obfuscation system or cipher system that makes it impossible for the casual observer (>99.99% of people) to tell what I'm writing or reading at a glance.
The challenges and conditions:
- Reading and writing speeds shouldn't be more than 50% slower with practice (I should be able to type this obfuscated text at 50 wpm and read/skim-read at several hundred)
- I'm not a math-savant so any obfuscation/encryption operations need to be doable with minimal math and without a computer
- From a security standpoint, the obfuscation/encryption doesn't need to be extremely secure, it only needs to be good enough that your average Joe (again, >99.99% of people) could spend several minutes reading over my shoulder without figuring out what I'm reading or writing
Potential solutions I've thought of:
- Teach myself an uncommon written language like Esperanto or Klingon which very few people can read
- Replace the symbols I use to write letters with alternatives, like Elian-script
My question:
Surely, this is a problem people have grappled with before. Besides operational-security solutions like making sure nobody's looking at your screen or using a polarizing filter, what solutions are out there?