On Fri, 6 Oct 2000, Tom Vogt wrote:
I'm currently thinking of whether or not it is feasable to put stego data into EVERY .mp3 downloaded. just put random data into those not intended to carry a message.
On Fri, 6 Oct 2000, Ray Dillinger wrote:
You're talking about making the audio channels a bit (more or less) thinner, but they're too thin already.
On Sat, 7 Oct 2000, petro wrote:
But if you make them a little "thinner" won't that mean that it will sound worse to more people, thus making the push for a better format?
Um, possibly if *all* MP3's were made with stegodata. If there is *one* source of MP3's that's stego'd and a bunch of other people trying to make them sound as good as possible, the one supplier with consistently poor sound quality will stand out when someone goes looking for stegograms. One thing, which you pointed out in a comment I snipped above, is that some music adapts better to MP3 compression than other music. There is plenty of room for stegodata in synthesizer- pop bands like "Yes" and "The Eurythmics", but almost none in layered atmospheric music like "Enya". If you pick and choose which plaintexts to stego, you can probably be less obtrusive about it. Bear