Can Sequence-to-Sequence Models Crack Substitution Ciphers?

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Authors Nada Aldarrab, Jonathan May arXiv ID 2012.15229 Category cs.CL: Computation & Language Citations 9 Venue Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Decipherment of historical ciphers is a challenging problem. The language of the target plaintext might be unknown, and ciphertext can have a lot of noise. State-of-the-art decipherment methods use beam search and a neural language model to score candidate plaintext hypotheses for a given cipher, assuming the plaintext language is known. We propose an end-to-end multilingual model for solving simple substitution ciphers. We test our model on synthetic and real historical ciphers and show that our proposed method can decipher text without explicit language identification while still being robust to noise.
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