CIA Sculpture Draws Code Breakers
From: MrPepper11 (MrPepper11_at_go.com)
Date: 05/27/05
- Next message: Bryan Olson: "Re: DRMTICS 2005 Call for Papers"
- Previous message: Jan Panteltje: "Re: Real-time sound cyphering algorithm"
- Next in thread: Prai Jei: "Re: CIA Sculpture Draws Code Breakers"
- Reply: Prai Jei: "Re: CIA Sculpture Draws Code Breakers"
- Reply: Unruh: "Re: CIA Sculpture Draws Code Breakers"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] [ attachment ]
Date: 27 May 2005 12:15:44 -0700
May 27, 2005
The Secret Passages In CIA's Backyard Draw Mystery Lovers
'Da Vinci Code' Has Many Trying to Decipher Secret Of the Kryptos
Sculpture
By JOHN D. MCKINNON
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
LANGLEY, Va. -- The big mystery at the Central Intelligence Agency,
sitting in a sunny corner of the headquarters courtyard, begins this
way: "EMUFPHZLRFAXYUSDJKZLDKRNSHGNFIVJ."
That's the first line of the Kryptos sculpture, a 10-foot-tall,
S-shaped copper scroll perforated with 3-inch-high letters spelling out
words in code. Completed 15 years ago, Kryptos, which is Greek for
"hidden," at first attracted interest mainly from government code
breakers who quietly deciphered the easier parts without announcing
their findings publicly.
Now, many mystery lovers around the world have joined members of the
national-security establishment in trying to crack the rest. So far,
neither amateurs nor pros have been able to do it.
The latest scramble was set off by "The Da Vinci Code," the thriller
about a modern-day search for the Holy Grail. On the book's dust
jacket, author Dan Brown placed clues that hint at Kryptos's
significance. The main one is a set of geographic coordinates that
roughly locate the sculpture. (One of the coordinates is off slightly,
for reasons that Mr. Brown so far has kept secret.) A game at
www.thedavincicode.com1 suggests that Kryptos is a clue to the subject
of Mr. Brown's as-yet-unpublished next novel, "The Solomon Key."
Gary Phillips, 27 years old, a Michigan computer programmer, started
researching Kryptos last year, hours after learning about its Da Vinci
Code connection. "Once it pulls you in, you just can't stop thinking
about it," he says. Eventually, Mr. Phillips says, he let a struggling
software business go under and took a construction job so he would have
more time for solving Kryptos.
The quest to solve the fourth and final passage of Kryptos's message
has spawned several Web sites -- including Mr. Phillips's -- as well as
an online discussion group that has more than 500 members. The
discussion group was founded by Gary Warzin, who heads Audiophile
Systems Ltd. in Indianapolis. He became fascinated with Kryptos after
visiting the CIA in 2001. But after months of trying to crack the code
on his own, Mr. Warzin -- whose other hobbies include escaping from
straitjackets -- decided he needed help.
Kryptos devotees are intrigued by the three passages that have been
deciphered so far. They appear to offer clues to solving the
sculpture's fourth passage, and possibly to locating something buried.
Sculptor James Sanborn, Kryptos's creator, says he wrote or adapted all
three. The first reads, "Between subtle shading and the absence of
light lies the nuance of iqlusion." Jim Gillogly, a California computer
researcher believed to be the first person outside the intelligence
world to solve the first three parts, came up with the translation,
which includes the deliberate misspelling of the word illusion.
The second passage, more suggestive, reads in part, "It was totally
invisible. How's that possible? They used the Earth's magnetic field.
The information was gathered and transmitted undergruund to an unknown
location. Does Langley know about this? They should: it's buried out
there somewhere." That passage is followed by geographic coordinates
that suggest a location elsewhere on the CIA campus.
The third decoded passage is based on a diary entry by archaeologist
Howard Carter, on the day in 1922 when he discovered the tomb of the
ancient Egyptian King Tutankhamen. It reads in part, "With trembling
hands I made a tiny breach in the upper left-hand corner. And then,
widening the hole a little, I inserted the candle and peered in. The
hot air escaping from the chamber caused the flame to flicker, but
presently details of the room within emerged from the mist. Can you see
anything?" Mr. Sanborn confirms that the translations are accurate.
In addition to deliberate misspellings, there are letters slightly
higher than others on the same line. Other possible clues are contained
in smaller parts of the work scattered around the CIA grounds. Made of
red granite and sheets of copper, these are tattooed with Morse code
that spells out phrases like "virtually invisible" and "t is your
position." In addition, a compass needle carved onto one of the rocks
is pulled off due north by a lodestone that Mr. Sanborn placed nearby.
Those poring over the puzzle these days are thought to include
national-security workers as well as retirees, computer-game players
and cryptogram fans. Some devotees believe Kryptos holds profound
significance as a portal into the wisdom of the ancients.
More typical is Jennifer Bennett, a 27-year-old puzzle aficionado who
works as a poker-room supervisor near Seattle. She came across the
Kryptos mystery last year while on maternity leave, as she searched for
online games to play. Now back at work, she still spends an hour a day
on Kryptos after her children have gone to bed. Like most would-be code
breakers, she relies on pencil and paper.
Others, like Mr. Gillogly, the California code breaker, are partial to
computers. Semiretired, he spent 30 years at the Rand Corp., then had
his own software business. He estimates that his computers have tried
at least 100 billion possible solutions to the fourth passage over the
years. His main computer these days, he says, is a 1.7 GHz laptop with
a Pentium 4 processor.
Experts say the fourth passage -- known to insiders as "K4" -- is
written in a more complex and difficult code than the first three, one
designed to mask patterns of recurring letters that code breakers look
for.
Efforts at finding a solution have grown increasingly elaborate. Elonka
Dunin, an executive at St. Louis computer-game company Simutronics, has
hunted down other encoded sculptures by Mr. Sanborn in search of
recurring themes. Some, like researcher Chris Hanson, who runs a
company that makes software for constructing 3D landscape models, have
mapped the CIA's headquarters or built virtual replicas of Kryptos.
Mr. Sanborn has grown uncomfortable with some of the attention his work
is getting, particularly from those who see religious overtones. "I
don't want my work manipulated in such a way that its meaning is
somehow transformed," the Kryptos sculptor says. He dismisses any
religious connotations or allusions to beliefs of the ancients.
A spokeswoman for Dan Brown referred questions to Doubleday, his
publisher, explaining that he's at work on his new novel and
"incommunicado." A spokesman for Doubleday declined to comment.
Mr. Sanborn, who lives and works in Washington, burnished his
reputation with Kryptos. He has exhibited around the world, including
at the Hirshhorn Museum and Corcoran Gallery of Art. His more recent
work has focused on the early development of atomic weapons, employing
actual equipment from the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
He had no formal training in cryptography when he created Kryptos, but
worked with a retired CIA official, Ed Scheidt, who was starting up an
encryption-software business, TecSec Inc. Mr. Sanborn says he withheld
the full solution to the puzzle from Mr. Scheidt, as well as from the
CIA itself. An agency spokesman says he isn't aware of anyone having
solved the fourth passage.
Despite the struggles of would-be code breakers, Mr. Sanborn insists
the puzzle can be solved, and teases them by saying that one clue
overlooked so far is sitting in plain view. "The most obvious key to
the sculpture, nobody has picked up on."
- Next message: Bryan Olson: "Re: DRMTICS 2005 Call for Papers"
- Previous message: Jan Panteltje: "Re: Real-time sound cyphering algorithm"
- Next in thread: Prai Jei: "Re: CIA Sculpture Draws Code Breakers"
- Reply: Prai Jei: "Re: CIA Sculpture Draws Code Breakers"
- Reply: Unruh: "Re: CIA Sculpture Draws Code Breakers"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] [ attachment ]