mala
12-13-2002, 06:33 PM
... I think I should post something here.
I'm +mala, I've played with (more or less) hand made steganography for a while, and I'm interested in steganalysis too... this is due to different reasons:
- on one side, I think that steganography could be a good way (like cryptography, use of remailers, knowledge about what happens first in your computer and then on the Internet) to protect ourselves and our freedom
- on the other side, steganalysis is not only a "funny game" (and a volley match is funnier, after all ;) but also a way to proof that what you've hidden is more or less detectable. Would you continue hiding your secret data in lower bits of images if you knew that they're easily traceable just with a palette analysis?
I've collected some very interesting papers about steganography and steganalysis on the Web, but still didn't have the time to dedicate a whole page. So, I'll give you the link to a big zipped file (almost 9MB) and then, slooowly, will make a good document to introduce them :) In the meanwhile, feel free to write your opinions here.
Ah, the link (at least for now) is
http://3564020356.org/zelif/stego.zip
I'm +mala, I've played with (more or less) hand made steganography for a while, and I'm interested in steganalysis too... this is due to different reasons:
- on one side, I think that steganography could be a good way (like cryptography, use of remailers, knowledge about what happens first in your computer and then on the Internet) to protect ourselves and our freedom
- on the other side, steganalysis is not only a "funny game" (and a volley match is funnier, after all ;) but also a way to proof that what you've hidden is more or less detectable. Would you continue hiding your secret data in lower bits of images if you knew that they're easily traceable just with a palette analysis?
I've collected some very interesting papers about steganography and steganalysis on the Web, but still didn't have the time to dedicate a whole page. So, I'll give you the link to a big zipped file (almost 9MB) and then, slooowly, will make a good document to introduce them :) In the meanwhile, feel free to write your opinions here.
Ah, the link (at least for now) is
http://3564020356.org/zelif/stego.zip