tempbib12.bib
@MISC{Walker1994impl,
author = {John Walker},
title = {Steganosaurus},
month = {December},
year = {1994},
howpublished = {circulating on the web},
url = {http://www.fourmilab.ch/stego/stego.shar.gz},
note = {\url{http://www.fourmilab.ch/stego/stego.shar.gz},
accessed 2005-03-25},
abstract = {Steganosaurus is a plain text steganography (secret writing)
utility which encodes a (usually encrypted) binary file as gibberish text,
based on either a spelling dictionary or words taken from a text document.
In portable C; public domain.}
}
@MISC{Maher1995impl,
author = {Kevin Maher},
title = {Texto},
month = {February},
year = {1995},
howpublished = {circulating on the web},
url = {http://www.ecn.org/crypto/soft/texto.zip},
note = {\url{http://www.ecn.org/crypto/soft/texto.zip},
accessed 2005-03-22},
abstract = {Texto is a rudimentary text steganography program which
transforms uuencoded or pgp ascii-armoured ascii data into English
sentences. This program was written to facilitate the exchange of binary
data, especially encrypted data. Why is this necessary? People or
programs may be reading your mail. Recent events in the US congress may
_require_ Internet Service Providers to monitor incoming mail and
determine whether or not it is "obscene" or lives up to particular
parochial moral standards. Since they can't scan the contents of an
encrypted message, and probably don't have time to manually look at each
uuencoded message, such emails will probably go into the bit bucket. This
program's output is hopefully close enough to normal English text that it
will slip by any kind of automated scanning.}
}
@MISC{Chapman1997impl,
author = {Mark T. Chapman and George I. Davida},
title = {NICETEXT},
month = {August},
year = {1997},
howpublished = {Website},
url = {http://www.nicetext.com/},
note = {\url{http://www.nicetext.com/},
accessed 2005-03-09},
abstract = {NICETEXT is a package that converts any file into
pseudo-natural-language text. It also has the ability to recover the
original file from the text! The expandable set of tools allows
experimentation with custom dictionaries, automatic simulation of writing
style, and the use of Context-Free-Grammars to control text generation.}
}
@MISC{Wayner1997impl,
author = {Peter Wayner},
title = {Mimicry Applet},
month = {August},
year = {1997},
howpublished = {Website},
url = {http://www.wayner.org/texts/mimic/},
note = {\url{http://www.wayner.org/texts/mimic/},
accessed 2004-04-12},
abstract = {This applet shows how data can be mutated into innocent sounding
plaintext with the push of a button. In this case, the destination is a
the voiceover from a hypothetical baseball game between two teams named
the Blogs and the Whappers. The information is encoded by choosing the
words, the players and the action in the game. In some cases, one message
will lead to a string of homeruns and in other cases a different message
will strike out three players in a row.}
}
@MISC{Winstein1999impl,
author = {Keith Winstein},
title = {Tyrannosaurus Lex},
month = {January},
year = {1999},
howpublished = {Website},
url = {http://alumni.imsa.edu/~keithw/tlex/},
note = {\url{http://alumni.imsa.edu/~keithw/tlex/},
accessed 2005-03-09},
abstract = {Steganography is a field concerned with hiding information,
typically within some unsuspicious "carrier". For instance, an online news
site might use steganographic watermarking to encode their images with
some copyright notice, allowing them to easily search for copies of the
same images on another web site by searching for images containing the
watermark. Schemes for hiding data in blocks of text exist, but are
usually dependent on being able to modify the physical appearance of the
text - usually by subtly moving lines up and down, etc. Lexical
steganography is the encoding of data in blocks of text on the lexical,
or word, level.}
}
@MISC{Hugg1999impl,
author = {Steven E. Hugg},
title = {Stegparty},
month = {November},
year = {1999},
howpublished = {Website},
url = {http://www.fasterlight.com/hugg/projects/stegparty.html},
note = {\url{http://www.fasterlight.com/hugg/projects/stegparty.html},
accessed 2005-03-25},
abstract = {StegParty is a system for hiding information inside of
plain-text files. Unlike similar tools currently available it does not use
random gibberish to encode data -- it relies on small alterations to the
message, like changes to spelling and punctuation. Because of this you can
use any plain-text file as your carrier , and it will be more-or-less
understandable after the secret message is embedded.}
}
@MISC{McKellar2000impl,
author = {David McKellar},
title = {Spammimic},
month = {June},
year = {2000},
howpublished = {Website},
url = {http://www.spammimic.com/},
note = {\url{http://www.spammimic.com/},
accessed 2004-04-12},
abstract = {There is tons of spam flying around the Internet. Most people
can't delete it fast enough. It's virtually invisible. This site gives you
access to a program that will encrypt a short message into spam.
Basically, the sentences it outputs vary depending on the message you are
encoding. Real spam is so stupidly written it's sometimes hard to tell the
machine written spam from the genuine article.}
}
@MISC{Shields2001impl,
author = {Paul Shields},
title = {Stegano},
month = {November},
year = {2001},
howpublished = {circulating on the web},
url = {http://zooid.org/~paul/crypto/natlang/stegano-1.02.tar.gz},
note = {\url{http://zooid.org/~paul/crypto/natlang/stegano-1.02.tar.gz},
accessed 2005-03-25},
abstract = {This is a small set of heuristic tools intended for use in
steganographic writings. How you use these tools is up to you.}
}
@MISC{Zalewski2002impl,
author = {Michal Zalewski},
title = {snowdrop},
month = {September},
year = {2002},
howpublished = {freshmeat entry},
url = {http://freshmeat.net/projects/snowdrop/},
note = {\url{http://freshmeat.net/projects/snowdrop/},
accessed 2005-03-20},
abstract = {snowdrop is a steganographic text document and C code
watermarking tool that uses redundant, tamper-evident and
modification-proof information embedded in the content itself, instead of
the medium, to simplify tracking of proprietary code leaks, sensitive
information disclosure, etc.}
}
@MISC{ComprisXXXXimpl,
corpauthor = {Compris Intelligence GmbH},
key = {Compris Intelligence GmbH},
institution = {Compris Intelligence GmbH},
title = {TextHide},
howpublished = {Website},
url = {http://www.texthide.com/},
note = {\url{http://www.texthide.com/},
accessed 2005-03-20},
abstract = {Compris Intelligence GmbH has developed a program which can
automatically reformulate text. Nevertheless, the meaning of the text is
retained completely. This feature can also be used to hide data in normal
text. The technical term for this is steganography.}
}
@MISC{ComprisXXXXimpla,
corpauthor = {Compris Intelligence GmbH},
key = {Compris Intelligence GmbH},
institution = {Compris Intelligence GmbH},
title = {TextSign},
howpublished = {Website},
url = {\url{http://www.textmark.com/},
http://www.textmark.com/},
note = {accessed 2005-03-20},
abstract = {Scanning, speech recognition, internet downloading, intelligent
text processing systems: Text processing becomes increasingly simple,
writing good texts remains difficult. With TextMark you protect your
intellectual property. This innovation distinguishes itself by its broad
applicability to all kinds of textual documents and its tamper proof
characteristic.}
}