I'm your biggest Fan
Tell us about your heroes. No. Scratch that.
Tell us about the lengths you've gone to in order to show your devotion to your heroes. Just how big a fan are you?
and we've already heard the fan jokes, thankyou
( , Thu 16 Apr 2009, 20:31)
Tell us about your heroes. No. Scratch that.
Tell us about the lengths you've gone to in order to show your devotion to your heroes. Just how big a fan are you?
and we've already heard the fan jokes, thankyou
( , Thu 16 Apr 2009, 20:31)
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MI6
Or the British Secret Services in general. Seriously, they got away with some fucking amazing scams. My favorite was the Enigma Machine.
These days, we all know that we'd cracked the Enigma machine during the WW2 - we could read anything sent using those ciphers. But the rest of the world (apart from the Yanks), didn't know that the Enigma machine was fallible. They still believed that it was uncrackable. Anything encoded with the Enigma, couldn't be read by anyone else.
So the war ends, the Allies are victorious, and Britain is feeling magnanimous. So what do we do?
We give all of the captured Enigma machines to our Commonwealth allies. Australia. New Zealand, all of our African allies and any other nation that we could scam into accepting our "gift".
From 1945 until about 1972 we had a merry time reading the take on all of these messages. It gave us a *huge* advantage in negotiations.
But I just love the sheer sneakiness of it....
Cheers
( , Tue 21 Apr 2009, 14:49, 8 replies)
Or the British Secret Services in general. Seriously, they got away with some fucking amazing scams. My favorite was the Enigma Machine.
These days, we all know that we'd cracked the Enigma machine during the WW2 - we could read anything sent using those ciphers. But the rest of the world (apart from the Yanks), didn't know that the Enigma machine was fallible. They still believed that it was uncrackable. Anything encoded with the Enigma, couldn't be read by anyone else.
So the war ends, the Allies are victorious, and Britain is feeling magnanimous. So what do we do?
We give all of the captured Enigma machines to our Commonwealth allies. Australia. New Zealand, all of our African allies and any other nation that we could scam into accepting our "gift".
From 1945 until about 1972 we had a merry time reading the take on all of these messages. It gave us a *huge* advantage in negotiations.
But I just love the sheer sneakiness of it....
Cheers
( , Tue 21 Apr 2009, 14:49, 8 replies)
They deserved it.
I mean, who in their right mind would trust a spy?
( , Tue 21 Apr 2009, 15:45, closed)
I mean, who in their right mind would trust a spy?
( , Tue 21 Apr 2009, 15:45, closed)
Is that true?
Great story if it is, but I thought they'd destroyed them all, together with the equipment they used to break the codes.
( , Tue 21 Apr 2009, 15:29, closed)
Great story if it is, but I thought they'd destroyed them all, together with the equipment they used to break the codes.
( , Tue 21 Apr 2009, 15:29, closed)
You were upset just before about the way Turing, who did so much for the war effort, was mistreated post war, and fair call. But you admire the sneakiness of this treatment of the allies who sacrificed so much?
( , Tue 21 Apr 2009, 20:16, closed)
I Know
Sad, aren't I...
Well - I never claimed to be consistent...
Cheers
( , Wed 22 Apr 2009, 7:04, closed)
Sad, aren't I...
Well - I never claimed to be consistent...
Cheers
( , Wed 22 Apr 2009, 7:04, closed)
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