Visual Cryptography

Visual cryptography is a cryptographic technique which allows visual information (pictures, text, etc.) to be encrypted in such a way that the decryption can be performed by humans (without computers). The first visual cryptographic technique was pioneered by Moni Naor and Adi Shamir in 1994. It involved breaking up the image into n shares so that only someone with all n shares could decrypt the image by overlaying each of the shares over each other. Practically this can be done by printing each share on a separate transparency and then placing all of the transparencies on top of each other. In their technique n-1 shares revealed no information about the original image.

References

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
grand canal of ireland
ardnacrusha
esb
charles algernon parsons
psilocybe
codex bezae
bridge to terabithia
ethical consumerism
stafford cripps
jnos kdr
the staffordshire regiment
astrazeneca
riyadh compound bombings
u.s. 24th infantry division
malpais
biblioteca ambrosiana
tanagra
terry eagleton
tilion
ewald jrgen georg von kleist
risk neutral measure
u.s. 11th airborne division
list of greek military bases
a fistful of dollars
narn i chn hrin
carrizoso malpais
phil bennett
stngn
axiom of dependent choice
masaryk
cisco wireless ip phone 7920
penteli
status quo ante bellum
aliki vougiouklaki
ibarra
sea of helkar
laterite
great gulf (middle earth)
machala
jimmy glass
earl of home
kota bharu
lord of parliament
dorwinion