HIDE SECRET MESSAGES INSIDE MUSIC AND PICTURES
Do you remember those secret decoder rings? Armed with such a ring,
you could write secret messages to your friends, secure in the
knowledge that your parents or teachers could never decrypt your
secret thoughts. Just to see if today's kids have anything like that
still available, I did a Google search but only found historical
references. So although the ring may have become a small bit of
history, your computer now offers kind of a modern-day substitute.
Probably the most popular type of file being traded and exchanged by
today's cyber-active youths are mp3 music files. Mp3 players are
being worn as fashion statements, hung from belts and even
integrated into clothing. Now they can secretly communicate by
embedding hidden text messages inside mp3 files with a program
called Secret Media from Direct Logic. Secret Media for Windows
enables you hide secret text messages within audio mp3 as well as
graphic files. Supported files include JPG, MP3, WMA, GIF, BMP, and
WAV.
According to Direct Logic, there is plenty of unused room within
these files to embed messages without altering the actual content in
any way. Even compressed formats such as jpeg that remove redundant
and unused data still maintain enough unused space to easily hide
lots of text information.
When you first run Secret Media, a wizard-style interface guides
users in creating and viewing hidden messages. To install a hidden
message, you first select the data file into which the message will
be placed. Then type in your message and Secret Media will determine
if there is enough space available to hide all of it within the
selected file. If not, you can shorten the message until it fits.
Reading a hidden message is just as easy. But in order to keep
secret messages hidden away from prying eyes who might also have a
copy of the program, you'll need a password before the message will
be decrypted. So your mission is to make sure that all friends in
your secret circle have a copy of Secret Media and the password.
This is not something that's going to be undetectable to
professional spies and decryption specialists. But then again
neither was the secret decoder ring. From the looks of things, I'd
say that Secret Media is a fun little program that will probably let
you fly below the usual radar of parents and teachers. It probably
will never occur to them that your innocent pictures and audio files
contain your secret information.
As an afterthought, you may find Secret Media to be an inexpensive
kind of hidden "watermarking" application you can use to secretly
mark and identify your proprietary or original data. For example, a
musician or photographer who wants to secretly mark their work might
use Secret Media to embed their copyright identification. There are
professional applications available that are specifically designed
for surreptitious watermarking identification but those programs are
typically a lot more costly that the $19.99 you'll shell out for a
copy of Secret Media.
www.directlogic.com/secretmedia.htm
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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