(27-10-2020, 07:09 PM)R. Sale Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Regarding a recent posting on a technique of word alteration as a method of encryption, there seems to be some interesting further possibilities.
The basic system takes the first two letters in a word as valid, then shifts all other letters one space forward in the alpha-numeric sequence.
I think a system like this would be instantly recognizable. It's like a crossword puzzle, even if you only have two letters in a few words, it's often easy to guess the rest. Humans are pretty good at filling in information if
some of the information is correct, especially if the recognizable info is in the same position in each word.
Shifted text follows natural language patterns even if the letters are different. The VMS is unique in the way certain glyphs appear in certain positions in the tokens. This is very un-natural-language like, something one would not achieve by the more common shifting patterns.
Anagram patterns are more likely to result in a VMS-like pattern, but then there have to be clues (marker or modifier glyphs, perhaps) as to how to reconstruct it, otherwise it's a one-way cipher. I'm not saying it's anagrammed, but given a choice between shifts and anagrams, it is more similar to anagrams, but only ones that follow a rigid structure for where the characters are positioned.