Rasmus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2005
- Messages
- 6,372
Let's say one or more people are keeping information of an incriminating nature on a particular computer. Another individual, thinking to blackmail them, copies all the files off the computer. However, when the people to whom he gives them try & read the files, they're too messed up to be deciphered. Something along those lines...
An encrypted or otherwise password-protected file.
But that has nothing to do with it being on a particular piece of hardware.
If the file was open on the computer it was being copied from, the person stealing the files would have to be very clueless to end up with an encrypted version that they aren't unable to open again.
This is what Dan Brown ended up doing - on several levels.Please be gentle. I have limited understanding of computereze! I'm just trying to suggest enough info to make it believable, I don't need to go into a lot of detail. Just so someone who's reading it won't go, "Oh, that wouldn't work!" and ruin their suspension of disbelief.
Thanks for the answers so far!
IIRC, the premise of the story was that someone developed a form of dynamic encryption", where the file contents would change constantly. (Complete and utter ********. A file doesn't change by itself, and even if it did, I could always keep a copy of whatever incarnation I wanted.)
The developer than challenged the NSA or some such to decrypt a file. (Also not possible unless he'd provide the algorithm used to create the file. If I gave you an encrypted piece of text, it could be anything, and you wouldn't have a way to know whether you decoded it the right way.)
Upon trying, the NSA overheats their supercomputers, they physically melt down and take away the institution's ability to read every e-mail on the face of the planet. (I don't think computers can get that hot. I know my laptop will shut itself down if it overheats ... and I could just pull the blug once smoke starts comoing out ...)
The developer than challenged the NSA or some such to decrypt a file. (Also not possible unless he'd provide the algorithm used to create the file. If I gave you an encrypted piece of text, it could be anything, and you wouldn't have a way to know whether you decoded it the right way.)
Upon trying, the NSA overheats their supercomputers, they physically melt down and take away the institution's ability to read every e-mail on the face of the planet. (I don't think computers can get that hot. I know my laptop will shut itself down if it overheats ... and I could just pull the blug once smoke starts comoing out ...)
Keep it simple: Make the file encrypted. Let the people who steal it be less powerful than the NSA.
I'm no expert by far, but unless you understand what you are doing very well, it's incredibly simple to write about something that too many people will know is just not possible.
Last edited: