Chapter 7
Susan’s mind was racing–Ensei Tankado wrote a program that creates
unbreakable codes!
She could barely grasp the thought.
“Digital
Fortress,” Strathmore said. “That’s what he’s calling
it. It’s the ultimate
counterintelligence weapon. If this program hits the market, every third grader with a modem will be
able to send codes the NSA
can’t break. Our intelligence will be shot.”
But Susan’s
thoughts were far removed from
the political
implications of Digital
Fortress. She was still struggling to comprehend its existence. She’d spent her life breaking codes, firmly denying the existence
of the ultimate code. Every code is breakable–the Bergofsky Principle! She felt like an atheist
coming face to face with God.
“If this code gets
out,” she whispered, “cryptography will
become a dead science.” Strathmore
nodded. “That’s the least of our problems.”
“Can we pay Tankado off? I know he hates us, but can’t we offer him a few million dollars?
Convince him not to distribute?”
Strathmore laughed. “A few million? Do you know what this thing is worth?
Every government in the world will bid top dollar.
Can you imagine telling the President
that we’re still cable-snooping the Iraqis but we can’t read the intercepts anymore? This isn’t just about the NSA, it’s about the entire
intelligence community. This facility provides support
for everyone–the FBI, CIA, DEA; they’d all be flying
blind. The drug cartels’
shipments would become untraceable, major corporations could transfer money with no paper trail and leave the IRS out in the cold, terrorists could chat in total secrecy–it would be chaos.”
“The EFF
will have field day,” Susan said, pale.
“The EFF doesn’t
have the first clue about what we do here,” Strathmore railed in disgust.
“If they knew how many terrorist
attacks we’ve stopped because
we can decrypt codes, they’d change their tune.”
Susan agreed,
but she also knew the realities; the EFF would never know how important
TRANSLTR was. TRANSLTR had helped foil dozens of attacks,
but the information was highly
classified and would never be released.
The rationale behind the secrecy was simple: The government could not afford the mass hysteria caused by revealing
the truth; no one knew how the public would react to the news that there had been two nuclear close calls by fundamentalist groups on U.S.
soil in the last year.
Nuclear
attack, however, was not the only threat. Only last month TRANSLTR
had thwarted one of the most ingeniously conceived terrorist attacks the NSA had ever witnessed. An anti-government
organization had devised a
plan, code-named Sherwood
Forest. It
targeted the New York Stock Exchange
with the intention of “redistributing the wealth.”
Over the course of six days, members
of the group placed twenty-seven nonexplosive flux pods in the buildings
surrounding the Exchange. These devices,
when detonated, create a powerful
blast of magnetism. The simultaneous discharge of these carefully
placed pods would create a magnetic field so powerful
that all magnetic media in the Stock Exchange would be erased–computer hard drives,
massive ROM storage banks, tape backups, and even floppy disks.
All records of who owned what would disintegrate permanently.
Because
pinpoint timing was necessary
for simultaneous detonation of the devices, the flux pods were interconnected over Internet telephone
lines. During the two-day countdown, the pods’ internal
clocks exchanged endless
streams of encrypted synchronization data. The NSA intercepted the data-pulses as a network
anomaly but ignored them as a seemingly
harmless exchange of gibberish. But after TRANSLTR decrypted
the data streams,
analysts immediately recognized the sequence
as a network-synchronized countdown. The pods were located
and removed a full three hours before
they were scheduled to go off.
Susan knew that without TRANSLTR the NSA was helpless
against advanced electronic terrorism. She eyed the Run-Monitor. It still read over fifteen
hours. Even if Tankado’s file broke right now, the NSA was sunk. Crypto would be relegated to breaking less than two codes a day. Even
at the present rate of 150
a day, there was still a backlog of
files awaiting decryption.
* * *
“Tankado
called me last month,” Strathmore said, interrupting Susan’s thoughts. Susan
looked up. “Tankado called you?”
He nodded. “To warn me.”
“Warn you? He hates you.”
“He called to tell me he was perfecting an algorithm that wrote unbreakable codes. I didn’t
believe him.”
“But why would
he
tell you about it?” Susan demanded.
“Did he want you to buy
it?” “No. It was
blackmail.”
Things suddenly began falling
into place for Susan. “Of course,”
she said, amazed.
“He wanted you
to clear his name.”
“No,” Strathmore frowned. “Tankado wanted
TRANSLTR.” “TRANSLTR?”
“Yes. He ordered me to go public
and tell the world we have TRANSLTR. He said if we admitted
we can read public E-mail, he would destroy Digital Fortress.”
Susan looked
doubtful.
Strathmore shrugged. “Either
way, it’s too late now. He’s posted
a complimentary copy of Digital Fortress
at his Internet site. Everyone
in the world can download it.”
Susan went white.
“He what!”
“It’s a publicity
stunt. Nothing to worry about. The copy he posted is encrypted. People can download
it, but nobody can open it. It’s ingenious, really. The source code for Digital Fortress has been
encrypted, locked shut.”
Susan looked
amazed. “Of course! So everybody can have a copy,
but nobody can open it.”
“Exactly. Tankado’s dangling a carrot.”
“Have you seen the algorithm?”
The commander looked puzzled. “No, I told you
it’s encrypted.”
Susan looked
equally puzzled. “But we’ve got TRANSLTR; why not just decrypt it?” But when Susan saw Strathmore’s face, she realized
the rules had changed. “Oh my God.” She gasped, suddenly
understanding. “Digital Fortress
is encrypted with itself?”
Strathmore nodded. “Bingo.”
Susan was amazed.
The formula for Digital Fortress had been encrypted
using Digital Fortress.
Tankado had posted a priceless mathematical recipe, but the text of the recipe
had been scrambled. And it had used itself to do the scrambling.
“It’s Biggleman’s
Safe,” Susan stammered in awe.
Strathmore nodded. Biggleman’s Safe was a hypothetical cryptography scenario
in which a safe builder wrote blueprints for an unbreakable safe. He wanted to keep the blueprints a secret, so he built the safe and locked the blueprints inside. Tankado had done the same thing with Digital
Fortress. He’d protected
his blueprints by encrypting them with the formula
outlined in his blueprints.
“And the
file in TRANSLTR?” Susan asked.
“I downloaded it from Tankado’s
Internet site like everyone
else. The NSA is now the proud owner of
the Digital Fortress algorithm;
we just can’t open it.”
Susan marveled at
Ensei Tankado’s ingenuity. Without revealing his algorithm,
he had proven to the NSA that it was unbreakable.
Strathmore handed her a newspaper clipping. It
was a translated blurb from
the Nikkei Shimbun, the Japanese
equivalent of the Wall Street Journal, stating that the Japanese
programmer Ensei Tankado had completed a mathematical formula he claimed could write unbreakable codes. The formula was called Digital Fortress and was available for review on the Internet.
The programmer would be auctioning it off to the highest
bidder. The column went on to say that
although there was enormous interest in Japan, the few U.S. software companies who had heard about Digital Fortress deemed the claim preposterous, akin to turning lead to gold. The formula,
they said, was a hoax and
not to be taken seriously.
Susan looked
up. “An auction?”
Strathmore nodded. “Right now every software
company in Japan has downloaded an encrypted copy of Digital Fortress and is trying to crack it open. Every second they can’t,
the bidding price climbs.”
“That’s
absurd,” Susan shot back. “All the new encrypted
files are uncrackable unless you have TRANSLTR. Digital Fortress could be nothing more than a generic,
public-domain algorithm, and
none of these companies could break
it.”
“But it’s a brilliant marketing ploy,” Strathmore said. “Think about it–all brands of bulletproof glass stop bullets, but if a company dares you to put a bullet through
theirs, suddenly everybody’s trying.”
“And the Japanese actually believe Digital Fortress is different? Better than everything else on the
market?”
“Tankado
may have been shunned, but everybody
knows he’s a genius. He’s practically a cult icon among hackers.
If Tankado says the algorithm’s
unbreakable, it’s unbreakable.”
But they’re
all unbreakable as far as
the public knows!” “Yes…” Strathmore mused. “For the
moment.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
Strathmore sighed. “Twenty
years ago no one imagined we’d be breaking
twelve-bit stream ciphers. But technology progressed. It always does. Software
manufacturers assume at some point computers like TRANSLTR
will exist. Technology is progressing exponentially, and eventually current public-key algorithms will lose
their security. Better algorithms will
be needed to stay ahead of
tomorrow’s computers.”
“And Digital
Fortress is it?”
“Exactly.
An algorithm that resists brute force will never become obsolete, no matter how powerful
code-breaking computers get. It
could become a world standard overnight.”
Susan pulled
in a long breath. “God help us,” she whispered. “Can we make a bid?”
Strathmore shook his head. “Tankado gave us our chance. He made that clear. It’s too risky anyway; if we get caught, we’re basically
admitting that we’re afraid
of his algorithm. We’d be making a public confession
not only that we have TRANSLTR
but that Digital Fortress is immune.”
“What’s the time frame?”
Strathmore frowned. “Tankado planned
to announce the highest bidder
tomorrow at noon.” Susan
felt her stomach tighten. “Then
what?”
“The arrangement was that he would give the winner
the pass-key.” “The
pass-key?”
“Part of the ploy. Everybody’s already got the algorithm, so Tankado’s
auctioning off the pass-key that
unlocks it.”
Susan groaned.
“Of course.” It was perfect. Clean and simple. Tankado had encrypted Digital Fortress, and he alone held the pass-key that unlocked it. She found it hard to fathom that somewhere out there–probably scrawled on a piece
of paper in Tankado’s
pocket–there was a sixty-four-character pass-key that
could end U.S. intelligence gathering forever.
Susan suddenly felt ill as she imagined
the scenario. Tankado would give his pass-key to the highest bidder, and that company
would unlock the Digital
Fortress file. Then it probably would embed the algorithm
in a tamper-proof chip, and within five years every computer
would come preloaded with a Digital
Fortress chip. No commercial manufacturer had ever dreamed of creating
an encryption chip because normal encryption algorithms eventually become obsolete.
But Digital Fortress would never become obsolete; with a rotating cleartext function,
no brute-force attack
would ever find the right key. A new digital
encryption standard. From now until forever. Every code unbreakable. Bankers, brokers, terrorists,
spies. One world–one algorithm.
Anarchy.
“What are the options?”
Susan probed. She was well aware that desperate times called for desperate measures, even at the
NSA.
“We can’t remove him, if that’s what you’re asking.”
It was exactly what Susan was asking. In her years with the NSA, Susan had heard rumors of its loose affiliations with the most skilled assassins in the world–hired hands
brought in to do the intelligence community’s dirty work.
Strathmore shook his head. “Tankado’s too smart to leave us an option like that.” Susan
felt oddly relieved. “He’s
protected?”
“Not exactly.” “In
hiding?”
Strathmore shrugged. “Tankado left Japan. He planned
to check his bids by phone. But we know
where he is.”
“And you don’t
plan to make a move?”
“No. He’s got insurance. Tankado gave a copy of his pass-key to an anonymous
third party… in case
anything happened.”
Of course, Susan marveled. A guardian angel. “And I suppose if anything happens to Tankado, the mystery man sells the
key?”
“Worse. Anyone
hits Tankado, and his partner
publishes.” Susan looked
confused. “His partner publishes the key?”
Strathmore nodded. “Posts it on the Internet,
puts it in newspapers, on billboards. In effect, he
gives
it away.”
Susan’s eyes
widened. “Free downloads?”
“Exactly.
Tankado figured if he was dead, he wouldn’t need the money–why not give the world
a little farewell gift?”
There was a long silence.
Susan breathed deeply as if to absorb
the terrifying truth.
Ensei Tankado
has created an unbreakable
algorithm. He’s holding us hostage.
She suddenly
stood. Her voice was determined. “We must contact Tankado! There must be a way to convince him not to release!
We can offer him triple the highest bid! We can clear his name! Anything!”
“Too late,”
Strathmore said. He took a deep breath. “Ensei Tankado
was found dead this morning
in Seville, Spain.”
No comments:
Post a Comment