Four ways to hide information inside image and sound objects

  2007-05-22 01:00:03
Ever find yourself with too many passwords to remember and no idea where to keep them so that only you can find the password list? Creating a password.txt file in your root directory is out of the question, as is a password-protected OpenOffice.org file. A piece of paper hidden somewhere is not a good idea, because after you forget where did you put it, someone else will find it and abuse it. Instead of these approaches, consider using steganography, a method for hiding sensitive information inside some other object, typically a JPEG picture or a sound file. 
  PNG Image  PNG Image  PNG Image
  Related tags  


This particular article has been collected via RSS syndication. We apologize if it's too brief.
If You wish to publish articles on LinuxStreet.net please contact us.


  Similar articles found on LinuxStreet  
ImageThe JavaScript Diaries: Part 10
ImageHow to add metadata to digital pictures from the command line
ImagePractical Steganography Part-1: Hiding information in Binary Executable File
ImageFiltering PDF-/XLS-/Image-Spam With ClamAV (And ISPConfig) On Debian/Ubuntu
ImageEclipse Plug-in for Generating Test Cases for Database Objects
ImageFloat irregular images on your Web pages with pngslice
ImageHow to hide an entire filesystem
ImageCLI Magic: Transform your audio files with SoX
ImageAnonymous Proxy Using Squid 3 On CentOS 5.x
ImageNZ objects to Microsoft Open XML standard fast-track proposal

Leave a comment on this article


Captcha

  
Check this if the code you see is not readable and resubmit the form.
(Data you entered will be preserved)



  

Comments (0)