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Friday, February 9, 2018

Bacon's cipher or the Baconian cipher was created as a method of ...
src: c8.alamy.com

Bacon's cipher or the Baconian cipher is a method of steganography (a method of hiding a secret message as opposed to just a cipher) devised by Francis Bacon in 1605. A message is concealed in the presentation of text, rather than its content.


Video Bacon's cipher



Cipher details

To encode a message, each letter of the plaintext is replaced by a group of five of the letters 'A' or 'B'. This replacement is a binary encoding and is done according to the alphabet of the Baconian cipher (from the Latin Alphabet), shown below:

A second version of Bacon's cipher uses a unique code for each letter. In other words, I, J, U and V each have their own pattern in this variant:

The writer must make use of two different typefaces for this cipher. After preparing a false message with the same number of letters as all of the As and Bs in the real, secret message, two typefaces are chosen, one to represent As and the other Bs. Then each letter of the false message must be presented in the appropriate typeface, according to whether it stands for an A or a B.

To decode the message, the reverse method is applied. Each "typeface 1" letter in the false message is replaced with an A and each "typeface 2" letter is replaced with a B. The Baconian alphabet is then used to recover the original message.

Any method of writing the message that allows two distinct representations for each character can be used for the Bacon Cipher. Bacon himself prepared a Biliteral Alphabet for handwritten capital and small letters with each having two alternative forms, one to be used as A and the other as B. This was published as an illustrated plate in his De Augmentis Scientiarum (The Advancement of Learning).

Because any message of the right length can be used to carry the encoding, the secret message is effectively hidden in plain sight. The false message can be on any topic and thus can distract a person seeking to find the real message.

Maps Bacon's cipher



Baconian cipher example

The word 'steganography', encoded with padding, where text in italics represents "typeface 2" and standard text represents "typeface 1":

To encode a message each letter of the plaintext is replaced by a group of five of the letters 'A' or 'B'.


Francis Bacon Cipher | Biliteral Key | Jim Epler | Flickr
src: c2.staticflickr.com


Bacon and Shakespeare

Some proponents of the Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship, such as Ignatius L. Donnelly and Elizabeth Wells Gallup, have claimed that Bacon used the cipher to encode messages revealing his authorship in the First Folio. However, American cryptologists William and Elizebeth Friedman refuted the claims that the works of Shakespeare contain hidden ciphers that disclose Bacon's or any other candidate's secret authorship in their The Shakespeare Ciphers Examined (1957). Typographical analysis of the First Folio shows that a large number of typefaces were used, instead of the two required for the cipher, and that printing practices of the time would have made it impossible to transmit a message accurately.


Orange Logic - Francis Bacon's Cipher, 1 of 2
src: sciencesource.com


References


Cryptology - Part 3: Bacon's Cipher - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


Further reading

  • William Friedman and Elizebeth Friedman, The Shakespearean Ciphers Examined, Cambridge University Press, 1957

How Looking for Ciphers in Shakespeare Shaped Modern Codebreaking
src: hyperallergic.com


External links

  • How to Make Anything Signify Anything
  • Tool to encode/decode Baconian ciphers

Source of article : Wikipedia