Animated Encryption
An anonymous reader submits: "Cartoons for fun and secrecy -- A student at the University of Dayton has apparently come up with an encryption
scheme using computer generated animation. Story at the Chronicle of Higher Education."
Maybe it is just me, but I think the poster is a little bit confused. It is not that animation is being used in encryption, but rather he was inspired by the crowd scene in Hunchback, where the characters movements were essential being controlled by random numbers to create a lively and chaotic look to it.
The article then states that the thought was to use random data in an encryption algorythm to make it unbreakable. So I don't think that we will be seeing messages passed around the the next Disney flick...
Jason finds way to recycle used oil
gives a more technical view of the current discovery (its a prng by the way)
-=DaveHowe=-
Specifically, we have the unbreakable claim warning sign, and even more specifically, this is almost certainly one of the one -time pad errors: There's also the technobabble, secret algorithms, and revolutionary breakthrough warning signs.
I hope they enjoy the $20,000 patent, 'cause it's not worth the paper it's printed on.