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image Featured Column: Steganography: Your Eyes Do Deceive You image
CastleCops

Featured Column:
Steganography: Your Eyes Do Deceive You






By Darren W. Miller, aka defendingthenet, CastleCops Staff Writer
March 22, 2005


The Message Must Get Through*

The year is 300A.D., and you're part of a war machine unlike anything the world has ever seen. You are a field General for the Roman Empire and charged with assimilating yet another non-Roman culture. Your current mission; get tactical information you've collected in the field to an outpost one hundred miles away. The land between you and the outpost is treacherous and filled with enemy. The information you've collected is critical to the success of the current campaign and must reach the remote outpost intact. This will call for ingenious deception.

You send for a messenger, who is in reality a Roman slave. The messenger's head is shaved clean, and the message for the outpost is tattooed on his head. Several weeks later, the messengers hair has grown in and completely concealed the secret information. The messenger departs and one week later reaches the outpost. A quick head shave and the outpost has the information needed to ensure yet another victory for Rome.

This is one of the earliest forms of Steganography on record. The art of hiding messages within another medium and avoiding detection.

The Ancient Technology Of Deception A Modern Day Threat

Take a look at the following two images at http://www.defendingthenet.com/stgpic.htm. The first picture is quite normal. The second picture looks exactly like the first. However, the second picture is not a normal picture at all. It contains a portion of the article you are currently reading in the form of a Microsoft Word document. It has been embedded in the image using a Steganography program and is nearly undetectable. Not only can you not see a visual difference in the picture, the file size of the original and the Stego Medium (image with the hidden text) is exactly the same.

Steganography - Optical-Ill

Stare at the image above. Do you see spinning circles? In reality, the picture is not moving. The eyes are easily deceived.



There are several programs on the Internet that may be able to detect a small anomaly in the picture, like "stegdetect", but the method used to embed the secret document is protected by a key, or password, as well.

The technology behind effective Steganography is quite complex and involves serious mathematical computations. Computers and technology make this a trivial task and make this art of deception a serious threat to the security of information. Company's that regard their information proprietary, and rely on the security and integrity of their intellectual property, could be at significant risk.


A Real World Example Of Steganography

Many organizations protect their internal network resources and information by using sophisticated security measures, such as firewalls. Many firewalls can block e-mail attachments such as executables, spreadsheets, and documents, and do so by looking for file extensions. Some security measures, or content filters, can actually determine if the particular file or attachment is actually the type to be blocked, a spreadsheet for instance, by analyzing the contents of the file. This helps prevent the transmission of file attachments that have had their extensions altered or removed.

But how many organizations block the sending of image files like, .jpg or .bmp images.

Imagine having someone on the inside of a company who secures a proprietary document. This person then embeds the document into a picture and sends it to an e-mail address on the Internet. The company's defense systems block many types of file attachments, but image files are not considered a risk, so they are allowed through. The sender and receiver previously agreed on the method and type of deception. Using a Steganography package freely available on the Internet the task was easily and securely executed. The company was completely unaware of the fact that important information was leaked.


Conclusion

There are so many components to this form of deception, I could write ten pages on the subject alone. The purpose for this article is to make people aware of this form of deception and the threat it poses to digital security. Steganography also has an impact on non-digital information as well. And, pictures are not the only medium that can be used. Sound files are another favorite host for embedding secret information.

If you would like to see Steganography in action you can download "The Third Eye" from the following link http://www.defendingthenet.com/downloads/steg.zip. It is a freely distributable Steganography program and was used to create the two image examples referenced above. This download contains the two images above and you will be able to open the image with the hidden text and extract it. The zip file contains a README.TXT file that will give you full instructions on how to extract the hidden text in the image.

But first, you will need the password! Can you guess it? I'll give you a clue: What form of deception did the Roman General use to send his message?**

*The story "The message must get through" although based on documented information about a Roman General performing such an act of deception, is fictional and was written as illustration of such an event strictly for use in this article.

**You should be able to easily guess the password however I must point out that the password should be entered all "lower-case".

Posted on Tuesday, 22 March 2005 @ 00:05:00 UTC by Robin (7953 reads)
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"Featured Column: Steganography: Your Eyes Do Deceive You" | Login/Create an Account | 4 comments | Search
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Re: Steganography: Your Eyes Do Deceive You (Score: 1)
by Snail  on Tuesday, 22 March 2005 @ 04:24:47 UTC
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Interesting... if not several years out of date.

Below, a link to one of my own private artworks also hiding a steganographic message and used as a simular demonstration.

http://snailsoft.fdns.net:20080/ArtGalleries/Gallery/Sketches/Ink/18.jpg

It was done in 1994 under Windows 3.1, more then a decade ago, and even at that time, was not new news.

While not everyone may be aware of steganography, to anyone in todays computer security fields who are not aware of it, should consider a new career.

Over the years, even web browsers have been created that perform such functions on the fly.
This was done mainly so that people in areas like China could deliver messages without goverment censorship, buts its applications are endless.

The notion of hiding in plain sight is an old one in deed and should not be considered new news.



Re: Steganography: Your Eyes Do Deceive You (Score: 1)
by Snail  on Tuesday, 22 March 2005 @ 14:22:34 UTC
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Wow... 6 of 50... it is ghastly appalling to think how inept the FBI still is... which likely explains my leaving their service ;)

It also emphasizes my view that those persons should find a new career.

I would also like to add, that images are not the only medium... I have tools that allow data to be buried in text, audio, program code, and yes, even in the trash/empty data space of storage mediums from floppy-harddrives-CDRs.

Further, I have equipment that allows this sort of hidden communications within AM/FM/Digital and IR transmissions.

Even PC tools like Norton Ghost and RAID striping software implement a version of Steganography.

From PC tech, to federal security, right down to the common user, Steganography is being used.
The real question though becomes, how is it being used?
And of course, how can one determine if its being used?



Can't see the message through the electrons. (Score: 1)
by Snail  on Tuesday, 22 March 2005 @ 16:18:11 UTC
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Oh, I should also point out this tid-bit for consideration of hiding messages in plain view...

I wonder what the FBI would think to do if a library were to vanish, and in its place only a pin were found (baring the FBI actually found the pin)?

Richard Feynman, a Nobel Laureate in Physics, was believed to be the greatest physicist of the twentieth century after Albert Einstein. In my paper “Quantum Computer:….”, I had described that the earliest idea about quantum computer came from him. The seeds of this idea were planted in a lecture that he gave on December 29, 1959 at the annual meeting of the American Physical Society at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). The title of this lecture was “There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom”, which was somewhat cryptic to many in the audience (1). One young Physics Professor thought that it meant while there were ample opportunities for the physicists in the low cadres, they were not so plenty at the top. So there was a great deal of anticipation about what Feynman would talk in his lecture. Feynman was known to be a practical joker and a delightful speaker (besides being a clever safe cracker).

He opened his lecture describing Kamerlingh Onnes, “who discovered a field like low temperature which seems to be bottomless and in which one can go down and down.” Then he mentioned Percy Bridgman for designing a way to obtain “higher pressures,…” And then prophetically he said, “I would like to describe a field in which little has been done, but in which an enormous amount can be done in principle. This field is not quite the same as the others in that it will not tell us much fundamental physics (in the sense of, what are the strange particles?) but it is more like solid-state physics in the sense that it might tell us much of great interest about the strange phenomena that occur in complex situations. Furthermore, a point that is most important is that it would have an enormous number of technical applications. What I want to talk about is the problem of manipulating and controlling things on a small scale.” To further elucidate his point in mundane terms in which it could be appreciated by every one, he said, “Why cannot we write the entire 24 volumes of the Encyclopedia Britannica on the head of a pin?”

Feynman was not only a great scientist, but he was a great seer and a sage also. He could perceive and think of objects which ordinary scientists found hard to imagine. He was probably inspired by microbiology for his epochal concept of ‘technology at small scale’. He mentioned in his lecture, “This fact… that enormous amounts of information can be carried in an exceedingly small space..is, of course, well known to the biologists, and resolves the mystery which existed before we understood all this clearly, of how it could be that, in the tiniest cell, all of the information for the organization of a complex creature such as ourselves can be stored. All this information … whether we have brown eyes, or whether we think at all, or that in the embryo the jaw bone should first develop with a little hole in the side so that later a nerve can grow through it.. all this information is contained in a very tiny fraction of the cell in the form of long-chain DNA molecules in which approximately 50 atoms are used for one bit of information about the cell.”

In 1980, to the publics knowledge, theory was made reality.
It is believed that the government was using this means of data storage years prior to public acknowledgement.

Now, consider if you will that atoms and electrons themselves are now the medium for data... and that by sliding or rearranging these building blocks of matter, one can hide literally volumes of information in any object...
I doubt anyone will be able to devise a means to reveal such hidden information without prior knowledge.

And don't forget... so far only raw data has been mentioned... but fact is, all this data can be encrypted by various methods so that even

Read the rest of this comment...


 
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