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Post by bluejay77 on Dec 9, 2012 5:28:36 GMT -5
I told you previously Swampy that the language is Pigeon English as spoken by the people of Papua New Guinea. I have read that in the Pacific war, in the WWII, the US Navy used the Navajo language as a cryptosystem -- and the Japs never were able to break it. Very different mindset, and such.
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Post by boxcar on Dec 10, 2012 23:32:52 GMT -5
Officials in Sudan say they have captured an electronically-tagged vulture suspected of being dispatched by Israel on a spying mission.
Sudanese officials are said to have concluded that the bird was a secret agent after discovering it was fitted with GPS and solar-powered equipment capable of broadcasting images via satellite, according to Haaretz newspaper, which cited an Egyptian website, El Balad. The vulture also had a tag attached to its leg with "Israel Nature Service" and "Hebrew University, Jerusalem", leading to accusations that it was on an Israeli surveillance mission
(what do you want to bet the tag read KOSHER BIRD in Jewish?)
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Post by Swampy on Dec 10, 2012 23:34:51 GMT -5
You got a link? I gotta put this in the FB version of this forum.
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Post by boxcar on Dec 10, 2012 23:59:05 GMT -5
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Post by bluejay77 on Dec 11, 2012 6:41:04 GMT -5
Officials in Sudan say they have captured an electronically-tagged vulture suspected of being dispatched by Israel on a spying mission. Sudanese officials are said to have concluded that the bird was a secret agent after discovering it was fitted with GPS and solar-powered equipment capable of broadcasting images via satellite, according to Haaretz newspaper, which cited an Egyptian website, El Balad. The vulture also had a tag attached to its leg with "Israel Nature Service" and "Hebrew University, Jerusalem", leading to accusations that it was on an Israeli surveillance mission (what do you want to bet the tag read KOSHER BIRD in Jewish?) I'm under the impression that vultures are non-kosher according to the chumash, ie. the Pentateuch, according to the kashrut. That reminds me of a Russian magazine me and my friend found in a Tel Aviv bookstore, with foreign magazines in that department. The (completely public) magazine's name was SEKRET. I told about this in a dinner of the Oregon Mensa, and my host, a retired Hewlett-Packard engineer, asked me: "So that's the Russian intelligence?"
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Post by mcnoch on Dec 16, 2012 10:55:48 GMT -5
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Post by Swampy on Dec 16, 2012 11:19:19 GMT -5
I'm wondering if they used the right code, because codes are always changing, or so I'm told. I'll put this in the FB group.
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Post by mcnoch on Dec 16, 2012 11:40:04 GMT -5
It seems that it wasn't a one-time pad.
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