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110 sats \ 14 replies \ @DarthCoin 11 Mar \ parent \ on: Stacker Saloon
hahahaha nice!
But man, be more creative and put another title for the note, something like a riddle, like a secret message, or a haiku :)
Make it PoW
I love a hunt!
Does the wallet still contain a prize? Would you reveal the address that holds the prize, so hunters can check if the prize is still there (in the future), and if the prize is worth the effort?
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check also these tools you can play with:
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Thanks I’ll add them to the list of bot busters!
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What you inspect is a copy. When you copy the file with stego info is losing the embedded data from stego.
Only the original file contain it.
By saying that "I can send this image to somebody else" I mean I will use the ORIGINAL file that I used in stego, not a copy.
So people looking to "decrypt" this file posted online, will find nothing in fact.
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keep in mind: whatever alteration to the original stego-ed file it will lose all the stego information. Be careful with that, otherwise you could lose the data you put inside. And always test your steganography.
This method is not to be used with only one copy.
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then good luck finding the 12 words in my guide.
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I studied https://darth-coin.github.io/beginner/be-your-own-bank-en.html where that image is present.
The "Madness in plain sight" paragraph mentions the 12 words. But if I were to follow your guide and hide my own 12 words in a document of my own, to reconstruct them later, how would I later
- identify which words were special to me
- in what order they go in the passphrase (if not from first to last)
I notice there are about 12 worlds like “cleanliness” in quotation marks. But putting those, in order, in OpenStego doesn't work. As you note
Even if you think about it, they have many years of trying until they can find the order …
But how would I, in the future, deduce the right order?
BTW, your explanation of PublicNote
This algorithm (which is open source and you can take it offline if you want) makes an encryption of this text resulting in another text
can be dangerously misunderstood: Yes, the software is open source and you can run your own instance. But the data is stored on the server, and when the server goes offline (your own server can vanish, too!), you can't follow these breadcrumbs anymore. If you stored your texts on the public server, and that goes away, you can't install your own server from the open source to get the texts back.
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I will put it easier for you: in one of my guides there are 12 words in plain sight. But are randomly (for the reader) arranged inside the text that will be almost impossible to find them and also know the right order.
I am the only one knowing the position.
I gave you that example not to start now to search them into my guide, but to do it for yourself. It will be insane to start searching them.