Wikipedia Article of the Day
Randomly selected articles from my personal browsing history
The four-square cipher is a manual symmetric encryption technique. It was invented by the French cryptographer Felix Delastelle. The technique encrypts pairs of letters (digraphs), and thus falls into a category of ciphers known as polygraphic substitution ciphers. This adds significant strength to the encryption when compared with monographic substitution ciphers which operate on single characters. The use of digraphs makes the four-square technique less susceptible to frequency analysis attacks, as the analysis must be done on 676 possible digraphs rather than just 26 for monographic substitution. The frequency analysis of digraphs is possible, but considerably more difficult - and it generally requires a much larger ciphertext in order to be useful.
History
Dec 26
Undertow (water waves)
Dec 25
F-distribution
Dec 24
Cumulative distribution function
Dec 23
Probability mass function
Dec 22
Book cipher
Dec 21
Poisson point process
Dec 20
Generic top-level domain
Dec 19
Beale ciphers
Dec 18
Heavyweight (podcast)
Dec 17
MurmurHash
Dec 16
Attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan
Dec 15
Mnemonic major system
Dec 14
Peter M. Lenkov
Dec 13
Lagrange polynomial
Dec 12
Polynomial interpolation
Dec 11
Newton polynomial
Dec 10
Quantile function
Dec 9
Static site generator
Dec 8
Flag Day (United States)
Dec 7
Seven-segment display character representations
Dec 6
Tori Kelly
Dec 5
Lynn Conway
Dec 4
G7
Dec 3
Nostr
Dec 2
Negative binomial distribution
Dec 1
Toledo War
Nov 30
Laurent series
Nov 29
Interface control document
Nov 28
ANT (network)
Nov 27
Functional analysis