--- title: Encryption in Python author: Benjamin Chausse date: 2023-10-25T20:01:27-04:00 draft: true --- During my last year of highschool, I designed my very own text encryption algorithm. I wrote software in python to encode and decode text using a custom algorithm I made solely to better understand information theory. The class in which I did this project was designed to teach students about managing long term endeavours. People could tackle projects related to just about anything. One person wrote and printed a recipe books, another built a small soap box cart, someone even built a potato canon. When it came my turn to choose, I decided to do something related to programming where I could learn things a bit more abstract along the way. During the research phase of this endeavour, I learned about classic cryptography stories such as the ceasar cypher, enigma, symetric and asymetric key exchanges. Realizing that some encryption methods could be broken through easy non-bruteforce approaches intrigued me. I therefore settled to attempt a message encoding method which would be more secure than something such as a ceasar cypher. I wanted to build my own algorithm and this is what I came up with: My initial realization was the reality that information can be represented through a variety of methods. An image can be stored as one huge integer in binary form. Text, encoded in ASCII, was just a list of 255 symbols. When viewed from that perspective, an entire article could be thought of as one big integer in base255. I decided to start by converting the source message one might want to encrypt into decimal form as shown by this animation: ![How the message gets encoded](msg-encode.gif) The thing is, if a message can be converted from base255 to decimal, so can the password protecting the original message. You would then have both the message and the password in a format that feels much more intuitive to manipulate. So this is what I did: ![How the password gets encoded](psswd-encode.gif)