ASCII Art Steganography 120
bigearcow writes "ASCII art is nothing new, but this site takes it one step further by allowing you to embed another data file within the image. The resulting ASCII art remains printable (i.e. no special unicode symbols) — this means you can print the image out, hang it on your wall, and have it look like an innocent ASCII art when it's hiding a secret document of your choice." You'll need a small (200x200 pixel max) base image from which the ASCII art will be built.
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
AppEngine quotas [google.com] explained
Previous art (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Excellent! (Score:2, Informative)
You're like someone who drives a Ferrari and when it breaks down he has to call the service...oh wait...there is no service because all the technical people are extinct since the new ones DID NOT learn the old ways.
I'm sure this kind of (programming) thinking is why Vista had so many bad reviews from enthusiasts.
And without those boring interrupt calls and HW access you would not have any other high-level language and you would be stuck in the old platforms (compatibility). Someone still has to do the dirty work.
I so hate the idea of "everyone can be a programmer".
Re:hang it on your wall? (Score:5, Informative)
Um, actually AES does hurt steganography since steganalysis tools have an easier time finding uniformly distributed payloads (such as AES ciphertexts) than somewhat biased payloads (such as standard text).
So, it would be easier to know that you have some data in there, but harder to know what the data is. Your call.
Take a look at this tutorial:
www.citi.umich.edu/u/provos/papers/practical.pdf