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- Newsgroups: sci.crypt
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!wupost!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!lynx!nmsu.edu!opus!ted
- From: ted@nmsu.edu (Ted Dunning)
- Subject: Re: Motorola 'Secure-Clea
- In-Reply-To: rcain@netcom.com's message of Wed, 6 Jan 1993 08:32:01 GMT
- Message-ID: <TED.93Jan6204710@lole.nmsu.edu>
- Sender: usenet@nmsu.edu
- Organization: Computing Research Lab
- References: <24.2B4A0D75@purplet.demon.co.uk> <1993Jan6.083201.7026@netcom.com>
- Date: Thu, 7 Jan 1993 03:47:10 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
-
- In article <1993Jan6.083201.7026@netcom.com> rcain@netcom.com (Robert Cain) writes:
-
-
- Owen.Lewis@purplet.demon.co.uk (Owen Lewis) writes:
- : -=> Quoting Ted Dunning to All <=-
- :
- : TD> ......... simple speech inversion really shouldn't be called a
- : TD> security device.
- :
- :
- :
- : Exactly so. I couldn't have put it better.
- :
-
- What about the modern analog devices that use split band inversion where
- one of 32 programmable split points in the voice band may be selected
- and changed at 60 Hz or faster at "random?" Two separate inversions
- are performed, one for the lower sideband and one for the upper
- sideband around the split point. This seems *much* harder.
-
- seems much harder, but unless noise is injected, the ww2 experiments
- showed that it wasn't hard to piece the spectra back together. in
- fact, trained listeners could mostly understand even these agile
- systems.
-
-
- Now that I think about it, a PRN
- that can spit out a new number every 500 ps sounds rather
- difficult.
-
- as long as you don't have to get the number off chip, it isn't so
- terribly hard. a pulson modulator only has to have one bit per cycle.
-
-