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An Irish graduate student has uncovered words blacked-out of declassified US military documents using nothing more than a dictionary and text analysis software.
The first task is to identify the font, and font size the missing word was written in. Once that is done, the dictionary search begins for words that fit the space, plus or minus three pixels.
Although the technique is no good for tackling larger sections of text, it does show that officials need to be more careful with their sensitive documents.
What text analysis software did you use? I would be interested in trying this out for myself.
Originally posted by AlnilamOmega
I am familiar with this method and have tried it on my own a few times. It works, but only in a very limited fashion.
I couldn't agree more.
but it's totally hypocritical to declassify a document, and then go on to hide stuff by blacking out the most important parts with a sharpie. Another reason to disbelieve the existence of democracy in the United States; a government that incessantly hides itself is not only being dishonest, it lacks transparency
Thanks for the info. I'll start looking around for some add-ons to OmniPage Pro.
Originally posted by AlnilamOmega
It was an OCR (optical character recognition) enabled piece of software I used at one of my former jobs to process forms. I found this plugin on the net that would read through blacked-out lines called "WYSIWYGhack" or something like that, but I just tried to look for it now and was unable to find it so my memory could be a bit off on the name. I am sorry I couldn't be very helpful on this matter.