1994-02-28 - Re: standard for stegonography?

Header Data

From: Matt Thomlinson <phantom@u.washington.edu>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 5317c62f1a80e943f697e701083a9517ded4d10121474b0d2bbd5491570831cf
Message ID: <Pine.3.89.9402271938.A803-0100000@stein2.u.washington.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-02-28 03:12:45 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 27 Feb 94 19:12:45 PST

Raw message

From: Matt Thomlinson <phantom@u.washington.edu>
Date: Sun, 27 Feb 94 19:12:45 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: standard for stegonography?
Message-ID: <Pine.3.89.9402271938.A803-0100000@stein2.u.washington.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



Sergey Sez:
> Have the offset default to the checksum-value of the reciever's public key!  
> The sending program could have the user specify the reciever, look his key
> up in the public-keyring and offset the message accordingly.  While, the 
> recieving program would automatically scan the file starting at the 
> appropriate offset based on the same public key checksum-value.

While Tim May Sez:

> Lots of options for standards. As others have noted, you just don't
> want to have to flag what standard you're using in the message itself
> (in plaintext, else why bother?) as that means the stego use is not
> longer plausibly deniable.


I think these two have a lot to do with each other. Sergeys' suggestion 
would definitely make it a tougher to pick out a starting place to 
search for hidden text. However, the message (if it is ever found in the 
file) points to the intended recipient. This defeats the purpose of 
"stealth pgp", (which would probably be used in this case to strip off 
telltale headers and such). 

If you weren't worried about this type of deniability, though, I don't 
see a problem with it.

mt

Matt Thomlinson                               Say no to the Wiretap Chip!
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Internet: phantom@u.washington.edu      	    phone: (206) 548-9804
PGP 2.2  key available via email or finger phantom@hardy.u.washington.edu







Thread