Okay, maybe it wasn't that much of a mystery. In fact, it took a little more than three hours for Danger Room reader jemelehill to figure out the odd string of letters and numbers in the logo of the U.S. military's new Cyber Command. Turns out, it's the new unit's mission statement, translated into 32 digits with the md5 cryptographic hash:
Eventually, other commenters figured it out (especially after jemelehill's solution made it to all the databases of cracked hashes). But that didn't stop folks from offering their own, shall we say, creative guesses, in order to win one of two coveted prizes: a Danger Room T-shirt or a ticket to the International Spy Museum.
Yahoo News, the Associated Press, Agence Presse France, Slashdot, El Reg and the websites of the Washington Post and the* L.A. Times* all joined in the fun. The hubbub even provoked this response from an official Defense Department blog:
See Also:
- Crack the Code in Cyber Command's Logo
- Cyber Command: We Don't Wanna Defend the Internet (We Just Might Have To)
- Prospective U.S. Cyber Commander Talks Terms of Digital Warfare
- U.S. Cyber Command: 404 Error, Mission Not (Yet) Found
- The Dangers of Turning Spies into Generals (and Vice Versa)
- Air Force Wobbles on Plan for Cyber 'Dominance'