Cryptic by Simon Hamilton
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
History of Cryptography

Secret communication is nil new. Books on the history of cryptography uncover that hidden messages day of the month to as far back as there are records. After millennia of attempts to conceal messages, one mightiness believes that every conceivable cryptographic technique was tried long ago and is now widely known. "Not so," according to Morten St. George, writer of a book on cryptic thinking. St. George keeps that forty-two of the Nostradamus prophecies use an alone type of cryptography that until now have never been identified, catalogued, or reused.

Moreover, St. George claims that it may be the most powerful word form of cryptography ever devised. Surprisingly, however, its techniques are extremely simple; it uses no complex mathematical codifications or anything like that. As St. George sets it: "Its tremendous strength lies in deception. If you don't cognize that cryptographic techniques are being employed, if you don't surmise that there is a hidden communication underneath, and then you look no additional than what's on the surface and the existent significance forever hedges you." St. George names it "deception cryptography."
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