At 4:55 PM -0400 6/10/99, Marc Horowitz wrote:
>"Arnold G. Reinhold" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>>> It seems to me that you could use the DNA encodings for common words like
>>> "the" and "and" as a marker for PCR. A soop of such initiators, followed by
>>> a gel for the longest fragments should crack this code quickly.  You might
>>> need a second "backwards" PCR step to recover the very begining of the
>>> message.
>
>So you encrypt the message before DNA encoding it.  If the scientist's
>assertions are accurate, just include the key alongside the
>ciphertext.  Then you have no known text to PCR for.  If you have a
>key distribution mechanism in place, then use that instead, and even
>if they do manage to find your message, they can't decrypt it.

The secret region of DNA they use to start the PCR is a key of sorts so you
will need some secure mechanism for distributing keys in any case.

>
>Of course, this DNA system is just yet another way to to
>stegonography, so all the techniques for doing stego well apply here,
>too.

Right. In particular you will need to mimic to some extent the base-pair
distribution in natural DNA, which I believe is not uniform, even in
regions that do not encode genes. I think it might be possible to pull out
a uniformly pseudo-random DNA string from a large amount of natural DNA.

Arnold Reinhold


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