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Disappearing Cryptography
Information Hiding: Steganography and Watermarking
In a time of electronic espionage, this new edition of our best-selling title ensures the security and confidentiality of your electronic communication and commerce!
Peter Wayner (Author)
9780123744791, Elsevier Science
Paperback / softback, published 18 December 2008
456 pages
23.4 x 19 x 2.9 cm, 0.77 kg
Cryptology is the practice of hiding digital information by means of various obfuscatory and steganographic techniques. The application of said techniques facilitates message confidentiality and sender/receiver identity authentication, and helps to ensure the integrity and security of computer passwords, ATM card information, digital signatures, DVD and HDDVD content, and electronic commerce. Cryptography is also central to digital rights management (DRM), a group of techniques for technologically controlling the use of copyrighted material that is being widely implemented and deployed at the behest of corporations that own and create revenue from the hundreds of thousands of mini-transactions that take place daily on programs like iTunes. This new edition of our best-selling book on cryptography and information hiding delineates a number of different methods to hide information in all types of digital media files. These methods include encryption, compression, data embedding and watermarking, data mimicry, and scrambling. During the last 5 years, the continued advancement and exponential increase of computer processing power have enhanced the efficacy and scope of electronic espionage and content appropriation. Therefore, this edition has amended and expanded outdated sections in accordance with new dangers, and includes 5 completely new chapters that introduce newer more sophisticated and refined cryptographic algorithms and techniques (such as fingerprinting, synchronization, and quantization) capable of withstanding the evolved forms of attack. Each chapter is divided into sections, first providing an introduction and high-level summary for those who wish to understand the concepts without wading through technical explanations, and then presenting concrete examples and greater detail for those who want to write their own programs. This combination of practicality and theory allows programmers and system designers to not only implement tried and true encryption procedures, but also consider probable future developments in their designs, thus fulfilling the need for preemptive caution that is becoming ever more explicit as the transference of digital media escalates.
Chapter 1: Framing InformationChapter 2: EncryptionChapter 3: Error CorrectionChapter 4: Secret SharingChapter 5: CompressionChapter 6: Basic MimicryChapter 7: Grammars and MimicryChapter 8: Turing and ReverseChapter 9: Life in the NoiseChapter 10: Anonymous RemailersChapter 11: Secret BroadcastsChapter 12: KeysChapter 13: Ordering and ReorderingChapter 14: SpreadingChapter 15: Synthetic WorldsChapter 16: WatermarksChapter 17: SteganalysisChapter 18: Fingerprinting and Forensic WatermarkingChapter 19: SynchronizationChapter 20: ObfuscationChapter 21: TranslucencyChapter 22: QuantizationChapter 23: Forensics
Subject Areas: Computer networking & communications [UT], Data encryption [URY], Computer security [UR]