Search content
Sort by

Showing 20 of 160 results by mirth23
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin Puzzle
by
mirth23
on 04/11/2016, 00:46:07 UTC
@mirth23

Is the code comprised entirely of alphabetical characters?  (You don't have to answer if you don't want to Smiley.)

The code is entirely alphabetical characters, all-caps.

i tried it
6b7a8b7a2b2b1d6a9b8a1d1d3d7a1a1d2a3b1a6d5a8a6b1a7d5d5b4a7b2d9b2d8d3b5a3d8b2d6a7 b9a8d7b7b8d4d4d6b3d2b7b2b2b7b2a9b5b4d8d1b4b1b8a2a4b2a1b8b6d3d6b9a4a8b3d7d8a1a9a 4a6d7d1a5a3a6a3b7d4a7d6b3d3b7a4d3d3d9b4b3b4b1b9a5a9a5a3a6a4b7a9b3b1a9b2b8a8d6b8 a2a6a8a1b1b8a7a1a7a3b9a7a6b4d7d9b5b2b6b6d1b1b1b2b3b1b6b3b3a3b7d1b6a3a8b5b9a7a2a 8d2d6b1a6d5d5d1a1b7a5b6d7b5d7b2d3d8d3d9b7d8b6a

When I said the "6b 7a 8b.." was 'correct', what I meant is that it is an accurate mapping of the 26 unique dot+triangle combinations that can be used for simple substitution, I did not mean the answer is literally "6b7a8b..."

Only I didn't understand if the prize was actually claimed by mirth23 or if it was merely moved as a part of the treasure hunt and the endgame is actually in levels to come

Level 1 was solved and a 1 BTC prize was claimed. It looks like the game is set up with prizes per level.

Quote
seems the guy saying he solved first level is just poking the bear and doesnt have the answer and is just trying to 'bump' the topic

My goal is to help curious people along without just giving the answer outright. Besides, there's 22 days left before the next gate opens.

Hint #4: The code is nonsense. This is why frequency analysis has failed.

Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin Puzzle
by
mirth23
on 01/11/2016, 19:02:56 UTC
I love games like these, reminds of that website that used a video to hide clues and it had like a few riddles in it.,

Can someone make a quick recap of where are we at now?

The game has not progressed past the first puzzle. The first step has been solved and there is a timer gating the next step. This recap from a couple months ago is fairly complete/accurate: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1488665.msg15144501#msg15144501
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin Puzzle
by
mirth23
on 01/11/2016, 18:37:02 UTC
Hint #3: 4pollo's best guesses here are correct*:

I disagree. I think the newly changed 3b is 2b. Imo

Checked it again, and you're probably right. It's really hard to see and be sure, so I'll change it back to 2b and will add a note:

Code:
6b 7a 8b             7a 2b 2b    1d             6a    9b
8a    1d    1d    3d 7a 1a       1d    2a 3b 1a 6d 5a  
        _8a_      6b 1a      _7d_5d 5b 4a    7b 2d      
      9b 2d            _8d_3b 5a 3d 8b          2d      
         6a 7b 9a    8d          7b 7b       8d    4d  
4d    6b    3d 2b 7b 2b 2b 7b 2a 9b 5b 4d    8d 1b 4b  
   1b 8a    2a 4b                      2a 1b 8b        
6d             3d    6b 9a 4a 8b 3d    7d 8a            
   1a    9a 4a 6d    7d          1a    5a              
3a    6a[2b]   7d    4a    7d    6b    3d    3b 7a   _4d_
               3d    3d          9b    4b 3b 4b    1b  
            9a 5a    9a 5a 3a 6a 4b   _7a_            9b
         3b 1a 9b                      2b 8a    8d 6b  
   8a 2a 6a    8a 1b 1b 8a 7a 1a 7a 3b 9a 7a    6b    4d
   7d    9b       5b 2b    6b    6d    1b 1b 1b        
      #b          3b 1b 6b 3b 3a             3b 7d      
      1b 6a    3a 8b 5b 9a       7a 2a       8d        
   2d 6b *a 6d 5d    5d    1a 1b 7a 5b    6d    7b    5d
7b    2d             3d    8d 3d 9b             7d 8b 6a
Code:
#    = 6 (or 2 or 3)
*    = 2 (or 1 or 4)
[2b] = might be 3b

* we (micaman, rock_collector, a couple others, and myself) were using different notations for the squares; I am 99% certain that the above is correct but translating between the two is irritating.
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin Puzzle
by
mirth23
on 27/10/2016, 20:00:11 UTC
Level 1 has been SOLVED with the entry of a correct keypad code. Doing so has kicked off a 30 day timer prior to the Level 2 opening. I'll drop a few hints during that time to help folks catch up:

Hint #1: The keypad code is derived entirely from the triangle + dot code. That and the URL for the text adventure are the only pieces of info needed from the painting to complete Level 1.

Any hints on roughly how long the final code is?

Hint #2: The final code was surprisingly long (> 100 characters) with all caps and no spaces.

Well, that throws my brute forcing scheme out the window. Tongue

Depends on how you implement your brute force - the text game checks the keypad code using an unprotected POST. Smiley
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin Puzzle
by
mirth23
on 27/10/2016, 19:32:28 UTC
Level 1 has been SOLVED with the entry of a correct keypad code. Doing so has kicked off a 30 day timer prior to the Level 2 opening. I'll drop a few hints during that time to help folks catch up:

Hint #1: The keypad code is derived entirely from the triangle + dot code. That and the URL for the text adventure are the only pieces of info needed from the painting to complete Level 1.

Any hints on roughly how long the final code is?

Hint #2: The final code was surprisingly long (> 100 characters) with all caps and no spaces.
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin Puzzle
by
mirth23
on 27/10/2016, 03:22:53 UTC
Level 1 has been SOLVED with the entry of a correct keypad code. Doing so has kicked off a 30 day timer prior to the Level 2 opening. I'll drop a few hints during that time to help folks catch up:

Hint #1: The keypad code is derived entirely from the triangle + dot code. That and the URL for the text adventure are the only pieces of info needed from the painting to complete Level 1.
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin Puzzle
by
mirth23
on 09/06/2016, 19:45:35 UTC
all,

I've been lurking in the background this time around but have worked through some of the same paths that have already been posted on here. At any rate, I tend to like to facilitate rubber duck debugging on here by producing summaries of what we know when we're stuck, so here goes:

* There are 15 QR codes. They appear to be text adventure room descriptions. Speculation is that they will be clues to other rooms in the text game. Many of them correspond to components of the Porto Alchemica (which I suspect will be important later). There is a reference to Mechanica Mathematica that doesn't seem to lead anywhere.

* One QR is a URL to a text adventure game that wants a keypad entry. Other items in the game don't seem relevant at this point (shirt, shoes, jacket, etc). A small amount of interaction is possible but we are pretty much stuck in a cell with a keypad.

* The QR codes have three different patterns of 4 or 6 gold dots around them. It's not clear what, if anything, this means.

* The tan squares make a non-compliant Aztec code (specifically, it is missing targeting pixels in the upper right of the interior square). Some attempts have been made to use the Aztec decoding algorithm by hand since the upper left portion of the code is all that should matter (the rest is CRC), but it didn't lead to a meaningful outcome. That said, Aztec decoding is voodoo magic so someone else might have better luck.

* Each Aztec pixel has a triangle and an orange dot. There are 26 unique combinations of dots + triangles (9*3 - 1 combo which never used), which seems to imply a basic alphabetical substitution cipher.
** Straightforward mappings combining dots and triangles (e.g., upper left dot + upper left triangle position == A, etc) don't cause anything to jump out for any of several 'normal' orderings of dots and triangles. If this is the mapping I would strongly suggest that the bottom right triangle is T-Z since that triangle is missing a dot in the bottom right position. Performing this mapping results in poor frequency analysis results. My suspicion is that a mapping like this is correct and that we need to understand which letters we need to extract from the grid, and in which order. "The journey inward begins here" may imply reading inwards, and the use of a 2 layer Aztec code might imply in a counterclockwise spiral.
** Other approaches to substitute letters have been promising but have gotten nowhere. Pigpen does not map well. The phone keypad is an interesting approach and results in slightly nicer frequency analysis but you can only do it if you do things like arbitrarily throw out Q and Z, and we haven't had any hints to try to map this to anything having to do with a phone. Also, I find it very hard to ignore the fact that there are 26 combinations of dot + triangle, which keeps me not wanting to jump away from a more straightforward substitution approach.

* Brown/green areas outside the Aztec code area. Unclear if they mean anything or are just art. (There was a LOT of 'just art' in earlier OP games.)

* The image is hosted on an image zoom service. Component image files do not have any EXIF clues. Neither does the map that you can download from the text adventure game.

* In the past there have been two things in the first puzzle step - proof of prize in the form of a public bitcoin address, and a hint leading to the next step. So it's useful to keep in mind that at any point we might encounter both, and that may be leading to confusion now.
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: The Legend of Satoshi Nakamato, FINAL STEP PUBLISHED.... 4.87 BTC GRAND PRIZE!
by
mirth23
on 05/05/2015, 19:17:29 UTC
Which of the 3 puzzles are you guys playing?
I already have 3 tokens on LTB I was just wondering about the difference between the image on LTB and the one posted on imgur/twitter and the extra information on LTB...

iirc they are identical according to bindiff
Post
Topic
Board Games and rounds
Re: Bitcoin Treasure Hunt - Can you crack the code?
by
mirth23
on 25/02/2015, 22:45:44 UTC
The Chapel of Saint-Hubert, at Château d'Amboise, France. This is where Leonardo da Vinci's bones are; he created the first conceptual image of a submarine.
Post
Topic
Board Games and rounds
Re: Bitcoin Treasure Hunt - Can you crack the code?
by
mirth23
on 25/02/2015, 22:17:43 UTC
For my next trick I'll guess that it's Basel, Switzerland, where Albert Hoffman, discoverer of "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" died.

Getting more specific - he died in Burg im Leimental (near Basel).
Post
Topic
Board Games and rounds
Re: Bitcoin Treasure Hunt - Can you crack the code?
by
mirth23
on 25/02/2015, 22:06:58 UTC
For my next trick I'll guess that it's Basel, Switzerland, where Albert Hoffman, discoverer of "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" died.
Post
Topic
Board Games and rounds
Re: Bitcoin Treasure Hunt - Can you crack the code?
by
mirth23
on 25/02/2015, 21:10:34 UTC
O, but the UK has already been found, so it must not be Liverpool....

How about Stuttgart, where Heinz Edelman (the artist/designer of Yellow Submarine) died?
Post
Topic
Board Games and rounds
Re: Bitcoin Treasure Hunt - Can you crack the code?
by
mirth23
on 25/02/2015, 21:03:06 UTC
2: Pepperland
Sorry but that answer is not worth its salt.

Ha, that's fair. Smiley

I suppose, riffing off of others and all the other graves mentioned, that I ought to guess Brian Epstein's gravesite, section A grave H12, Long Lane Jewish Cemetery, Aintree, Liverpool.
Post
Topic
Board Games and rounds
Re: Bitcoin Treasure Hunt - Can you crack the code?
by
mirth23
on 25/02/2015, 20:36:40 UTC
2: Pepperland
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin ARG, The legend begins here.... 4.33 BTC BOUNTY!!!
by
mirth23
on 20/09/2014, 03:55:04 UTC
It's still going on!
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin ARG, The legend begins here.... 4.33 BTC BOUNTY!!!
by
mirth23
on 20/09/2014, 00:12:48 UTC
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin ARG, The legend begins here.... 4.33 BTC BOUNTY!!!
by
mirth23
on 19/09/2014, 01:26:13 UTC
EDIT: What happened to the Satoshi hacker? Could this be related? That'd be so crazy if Satoshi had a hand in this...

That came up earlier in the thread and someone determined that the game started before Satoshi's email got hacked, so it's probably just happenstance.

Unless some hacker was involved, doubt Satoshi would be directly involved. Then it's a matter of coordination. The hacker surfaced, and then just vanished? The warning and the hack were only 4 days apart. The warning came from the puzzle and then we had someone pretending to be Satoshi? I can't believe it'd simply be a coincidence.

EDIT: Wasn't the OP accused of being a hacker in the last game?
EDIT: OP twitter even says "1337 haxor" https://mobile.twitter.com/coin_artist

Seeing as how this entire game could be interpreted as an elaborate and exquisitely crafted multimedia epic poem dedicated to Satoshi....it seems extremely farfetched that @coin_artist would be in any way connected to the Satoshi hacker. 

...then again, it would make a perfect alibi...  Smiley

If so, I look forward to my big payday in buttcoin.
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin ARG, The legend begins here.... 4.33 BTC BOUNTY!!!
by
mirth23
on 19/09/2014, 00:06:46 UTC
EDIT: What happened to the Satoshi hacker? Could this be related? That'd be so crazy if Satoshi had a hand in this...

That came up earlier in the thread and someone determined that the game started before Satoshi's email got hacked, so it's probably just happenstance.
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin ARG, The legend begins here.... 4.33 BTC BOUNTY!!!
by
mirth23
on 18/09/2014, 22:06:01 UTC
General working theory: we are looking for another whit3r4bbi7.com page, and need to use the capital letters in the poem to make a pointer.

here's what we have to work with:
Code:
SATLOFSHITNAKAMAATOGBOOFDBYEFRIENDBIWNF    [full string]
SAT O SHI NAKAM  TOG OO DBYEFRIEND         [hidden message]
   L F   T     AA   B  F          BIWNF    [extra letters]

Possible additions:
- O: missing from SATOSHI NAKAMOTO
- GET/GIVE: finish the trailing 'For' word in the poem
- a: there is an extra 'a' in mislead, based on the rhyme scheme
- k: ASCII value of the dangling 107 in the col 15 of DocuColor dots
- v: ascii value of the binary in the puzzle (might just be for v0.3.19)
- DISABLE (from the graphics)

it's generally accepted that 0.3.19 must point at the v0.3.19 of bitcoin, where disabling 'safe mode' is discussed. see more:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2228.0
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Changelog#0.3.19.5B22.5D
http://sourceforge.net/p/bitcoin/mailman/message/26744510/

Some possible words to add from 0.3.19:
DOS
SAFE MODE

Other random note: the timestamp in the DocuColor output is off by 8 hours from the time that the first Bitcoin block was mined. That might be some kind of hint to shift something by 8.

If anything, we have too much to work with rather than too little. A lot of us have been paying special attention to the short set of "extra" letters, looking for anagrams and applying ROT, but nobody's come up with anything yet as far as I'm aware.
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: New Bitcoin ARG, The legend begins here.... 4.33 BTC BOUNTY!!!
by
mirth23
on 18/09/2014, 20:27:53 UTC
Perfect, thank you.  I figured it had something to do with the serial number.

Yup whiterabbit twitter hinted us about using the serial and the print hint appeared in the fruits with the server url.

What was the tweet? I didn't see it.

Incidentally, I am working on a document similar to what shorena did last time around. It's already to 11 pages, and I haven't even put in any of the jpegs/pngs yet.