Jump to content

ZNS Radios, Quotes, Ciphers, Scraps, etc.


Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)
  On 5/25/2016 at 5:40 PM, Kalinine said:

We just put the two papers together. I don't see any progress as of now on reddit.

 

Expand  

Thx for the quick answer...

  Spoiler, click to open contents

Save you the scrolling - solved

Edited by Nieno69
Posted

First, I've created the alphabet key/table, cipher text in numerical form, and plaintext after substitution

Alphabet:

  Spoiler, click to open contents

Numerical Cipher Text:

  Spoiler, click to open contents

Submitted Plaintext:

  Spoiler, click to open contents

 

Second, and more importantly, I don't think we're done with this cipher yet. There are too many oddities for me to be convinced there isn't more information hidden on this page. Here's my list of...oddities:

  1. We don't use the circles or lines in this decryption process
  2. Every number in the key is used TWICE in the document but only once in the cipher text
    1. This is determined by searching the document created by Draz. I've also cross referenced it in a version created by Waterkh, so it isn't a copy error.
    2. This includes all number in the key, both primes and non-primes.
    3. There are only two exceptions: 
      1. (547, 937, 257, 499)- all of these numbers only appear once in the entire cipher text
      2. (107*, 608, 20, 174*)- 107 appears twice and (608, 20, 174) appear twice but they only appear together once.
  3. Why are there numbers in the cipher text and alphabet that are not used in the plaintext?
    1. Perfect example is the letter Z. There are 7 numbers associated with it but they are not part of the plaintext.
    2. They do not offer any additional functions such as spaces or punctuation. I don't believe it complicates the cipher in any way and could easily have been left out, such as with G, J, or Q.

Personally, I think this requires more looking into, but if people have other theories/explanations I would love to hear them!

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
  On 5/28/2016 at 1:47 AM, certainpersonio said:

 

  1. We don't use the circles or lines in this decryption process
  2. Every number in the key is used TWICE in the document but only once in the cipher text
    1. This is determined by searching the document created by Draz. I've also cross referenced it in a version created by Waterkh, so it isn't a copy error.
    2. This includes all number in the key, both primes and non-primes.
    3. There are only two exceptions: 
      1. (547, 937, 257, 499)- all of these numbers only appear once in the entire cipher text
      2. (107*, 608, 20, 174*)- 107 appears twice and (608, 20, 174) appear twice but they only appear together once.
  3. Why are there numbers in the cipher text and alphabet that are not used in the plaintext?
    1. Perfect example is the letter Z. There are 7 numbers associated with it but they are not part of the plaintext.
    2. They do not offer any additional functions such as spaces or punctuation. I don't believe it complicates the cipher in any way and could easily have been left out, such as with G, J, or Q.

Personally, I think this requires more looking into, but if people have other theories/explanations I would love to hear them!

Expand  

I like your thoughts about this - but:

 

If the numbers were not present twice it would be solved faster because the two scrappapers would fit perfectly 

 

I think the circled letters are there to not make the other circles (to stick the second scrap above) obvious...

 

But further i would love to see if the circled letters has a meaning e.g. the names of the "blood owners"... or another little sentence.... but i dont see something like that left in the cipher....

 

Has anyone with photoshop skills tried to let it fit in another position? E.g. flipped and rotated?

Edited by Nieno69
  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, Code of Conduct, We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue. .