You Can Send Invisible Messages With Subtle Font Tweaks | WIRED
The method is a steganographic technique, meaning it hides secret information in plain sight such that only its intended recipient knows where to look for it and how to extract it. FontCode can be applied to hundreds of common fonts, like Helvetica or Times New Roman, and works in word processors like Microsoft Word. Data encoded with FontCode can also endure across any image-preserving digital format, like PDF or PNG. The secret data won’t persist after, say, copy and pasting FontCode text between text editors.
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The text perturbations FontCode uses to embed a message involve slightly changing curvatures, widths, and heights—but crucially it’s all imperceptible to the naked eye. You can intuit that some letters, like capital “I"s or “J"s, don’t have a lot of complexity in which to hide subtle variations. But lowercase “a"s and "g"s, for example, have lots of edges and curves that can be elongated or shortened and bulked up or paired down.
The only easy way to extract the hidden information in all those tiny tweaks is with the research teams’ decoding algorithm. A recipient of a FontCode message could use their smartphone to take a picture of text manipulated with FontCode, then run the photo through a dedicated mobile app that decrypts the code to pull out the hidden message. It would also be possible to set up decoding schemes that use a webcam, a scanner, or any other image digitization method. You can see how it works in the video below.
(Source: https://www.youtube.com/)