So… I found out a way to send encrypted messages using amateur radio.

There is an app called Rattlegram that lets you convert a string of text into soundwaves that plays though your phone’s speaker. If I just use an app like Secure Space Encryptor (SSE) to encrypt a text, then copy-paste it to the Rattlegram app, then transmit that over radio, then using the same app to record the sound and reverse the process on the other end. Voila! Encrypted long(ish) range communications without a centralized server!

But I looked it up and apparantly its illegal to encrypt communications over the amateur radio bands. What are the odds of actually getting in trouble? 🤔

(To the FCC agents reading this: this is just a hypothetical, a thought experiment, I’m totally not gonna do this 😉)

  • @evasive_chimpanzee
    link
    12 days ago

    I’m not clever enough to come up with a good example on the spot, but you could have something along the lines of a scheme where the word selection corresponds to a not-obvious code. For example, if you wanted to secretly send the word “hello”, and you’ve previously given your receiver a code word “apple”:

    Hello > 7 4 11 11 14 Apple > 0 15 15 11 4

    Adding the code word to the secret message, you’d get:

    7 19 0 22 18 > H T A W S

    Then your message could be something like:

    How are you doing? Today, I went to the store. Avocados were on sale. When do you want to meet up? Saturday looks good for me.

    There are definitely way better methods to do the encoding part, and probably also better ways of doing the concealment part.

    • AwesomeLowlander
      link
      fedilink
      11 day ago

      Yeah. At that point I think it’s no longer considered steganography. It’s really interesting though all the stuff they did during the cold war to get past surveillance.