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Lessons on managing cyber security risk from the Dickens Code Project.

Charles Dickens used a shorthand code that stumped historians for years. But it has finally been hacked by an IT worker from California who responded to a challenge from the Dickens Code Project. The Project was set up by Dr Claire Wood at the University of Leicester and offered a modest prize of £300 to anyone who could hack the scrawled note by Dickens. Dickens based his shorthand on a script developed by Thomas Gurney, a shorthand writer at the Old Bailey, and noted himself that it was ‘the devil’s handwriting’.

The Competition

Upon launching the competition in October 2021, the note was downloaded 1,000 times in three days. Competitors had access to a notebook where Dickens had explained a few of the symbols he’d used. Only 16 people were able to make any progress and submit solutions – each of which were incomplete. Shane Baggs, a Reddit codes group enthusiast, scooped the £300 prize by hacking Dickens’ code.

Dickens wrote 15 novels as well as many other texts. What lessons can security professionals take from his most famous titles, which lend themselves nicely to cyber security analogies?!

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