• Welcome to BookAndReader!

    We LOVE books and hope you'll join us in sharing your favorites and experiences along with your love of reading with our community. Registering for our site is free and easy, just CLICK HERE!

    Already a member and forgot your password? Click here.

Corollary to the Georgia Guidestones: Kryptos

sparkchaser

Administrator and Stuntman
Staff member
Very interesting article. I suppose whoever can decipher it will have their pick of jobs at the CIA or NSA.

Mission Impossible: The Code Even the CIA Can't Crack

The most celebrated inscription at the Central Intelligence Agency's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, used to be the biblical phrase chiseled into marble in the main lobby: "And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." But in recent years, another text has been the subject of intense scrutiny inside the Company and out: 865 characters of seeming gibberish, punched out of half-inch-thick copper in a courtyard.

It's part of a sculpture called Kryptos, created by DC artist James Sanborn. He got the commission in 1988, when the CIA was constructing a new building behind its original headquarters. The agency wanted an outdoor installation for the area between the two buildings, so a solicitation went out for a piece of public art that the general public would never see. Sanborn named his proposal after the Greek word for hidden. The work is a meditation on the nature of secrecy and the elusiveness of truth, its message written entirely in code.

Almost 20 years after its dedication, the text has yet to be fully deciphered. A bleary-eyed global community of self-styled cryptanalysts—along with some of the agency's own staffers—has seen three of its four sections solved, revealing evocative prose that only makes the puzzle more confusing. Still uncracked are the 97 characters of the fourth part (known as K4 in Kryptos-speak). And the longer the deadlock continues, the crazier people get.

awww.wired.com_images_article_magazine_1705_ff_kryptos_f.jpg

I bet it says "Don't forget to drink your Ovaltine".
 
Know it well! I've had my go at it and solved the easy ones, K2 and K3 long ago. Close but no cigar on K1, and still think about K4, nights and mornings. Just this morning, in fact. :cool:
Hobby of mine. Nice picture!
 
I pick easier ones, more my own size, but they are hard to find.
I solved the contest puzzle, though, that E. A. Poe pronounced unsolveable. In fact he called it a fraud --- a 12 alphabet Vigenere. My best to date. :whistling:
 
Back
Top