Acme Commodity and Phrase Code explained

Author:A. C. Meisenbach
Country:United States
Subject:Cipher and telegraph codes
Pub Date:1923
Pages:902
Oclc:1050563
Congress:HE7676 .A2

Acme Commodity and Phrase Code is a codebook providing the general-purpose commercial telegraph code known as the Acme Code. It was published in 1923 by the Acme Code Company. The book provides a listing of condensed terms and codes used to shorten telegrams and save money. The book was extremely popular amongst businesses in the 1930s.[1] This code was one of the few telegram codes permitted by the Allied powers during the Second World War.[2]

Description

The Acme code consists of one hundred thousand five letter codes each intended to stand in for a phrase. It was designed to be tolerant of transposition errors; the author claims that "no transposition of any two adjoining letters will make another word in the book". However, as later discovered by J. Reeds, the code did not provide this level of error correction, containing at least eleven pairs of words differing only by the transposition of two letters.[3] Despite these errors, this code is a precursor to more modern error correction codes.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Newton, David E.. Encyclopedia of Cryptology. 1997. Instructional Horizons, Inc. Santa Barbara California. 4.
  2. Book: Kahn , David . 1996. The Codebreakers. Simon and Schuster. 274. 978-0-684-83130-5. David Kahn (writer) . The Codebreakers.
  3. Web site: Compression, Correction, Confidentiality, and Comprehension: A Look at Telegraph Codes . Bellovin . Steven M. . Steven M. Bellovin . 27 July 2011 . 17 November 2018.
  4. Simmons. G.J.. May 1988. A survey of information authentication. Proceedings of the IEEE. 76. 5. 603–620. 10.1109/5.4445. Gustavus Simmons .