Today’s AI can crack second world war Enigma code ‘in short order’, experts say
Crowning achievement of Alan Turing’s codebreakers is now ‘straightforward’, according to computer scientists
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2025/may/07/todays-ai-can-crack-second-world-war-enigma-code-in-short-order-experts-sayOpen linkView original on lemmy.zip
Surprise surprise, very well-known, solved, problem with endless coverage online is solvable by models trained on the internet..
What do you expect? Computers have gotten a lot faster over the last 80 or so years.
This is super stupid.
Yeah because AI was trained on the works of Alan Turing and the others. This is like saying that I'm smarter than Turing because I can open a browser and look up how the enigma machine worked while it took months for them.
The rest of the job (the actual decrypting) was made by brute forcing solutions so it has nothing to do with AI. Again, I'm not smarter than old mathematicians because I can fire up wolfram alpha and solve integrals in seconds.
Slop
No, LLMs can't decipher Enigma ciphertext.
He's speculating that an LLM could write a program to do so.
The link is to an abstract that tells you nothing more without an account on this website. But a better write-up of the mentioned research is here: https://www.digitalocean.com/blog/how-2000-droplets-broke-the-enigma-code-in-13-minutes
So this is about research from 8 years ago! They go on to explain that they did a brute-force attack on the key, using a RNN (recurrent neural network) classifier to detect if the decrypted text looked like German.
I'm no cryptographer but I'm pretty sure that we have been able to classify language samples quite successfully for a long time using much simpler (and faster) statistical techniques, like n-gram frequency analysis.
The fact that the Guardian article mentions none of this and presents the topic ambiguously enough to make it sound like ChatGPT can break ciphers on its own makes me think this is more deliberate AI-hype.