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Thread: Gay Man Breaks Enigma Code Saving Thosands Can't Be Saved

  1. #1
    Forum's veteran Manforallseasons's Avatar
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    Gay Man Breaks Enigma Code Saving Thosands Can't Be Saved

    Alan Turing, who broke Enigma code in World War II, pardoned by Queen over conviction for homosexuality.
    Alan Turing died in 1954 after eating an apple laced with cyanide, two years after he was sentenced to chemical castration. Britain has granted a posthumous pardon to Alan Turing, the World War II code-breaking hero who killed himself after he was convicted of the then crime of homosexuality.


    Turing is often hailed as a father of modern computing and he played a pivotal role in breaking Germany's Enigma code, an effort that some historians say brought an early end to World War II.

    He died in 1954 after eating an apple laced with cyanide, two years after he was sentenced to chemical castration for the "gross indecency" of homosexuality. A coroner ruled that Turing killed himself, though this has since been questioned.

    The Queen has now pardoned Turing for "a sentence we would now consider unjust and discriminatory", Justice Minister Chris Grayling said.
    Homosexuality was decriminalised in Britain in 1967.

    "A pardon from the Queen is a fitting tribute to an exceptional man," Mr Grayling said.

    Prime Minister David Cameron said the code-breaker's work saved countless lives.

    "Alan Turing was a remarkable man who played a key role in saving this country in World War II by cracking the German Enigma code," Mr Cameron said.

    "He also left a remarkable national legacy through his substantial scientific achievements, often being referred to as the father of modern computing."

    The Enigma code was used to encrypt communications between German U-boats in the North Atlantic ocean. Turing's efforts to break it were virtually unknown to the public at the time of his death, as his work was kept secret until 1974.

    Turing also published pioneering work on early computers, writing in a 1936 paper of a "universal Turing machine".

    Having told people he was trying to "build a brain", his theory was the first to consider feeding programs into a machine as data, allowing a single machine to perform the functions of many - just like today's computers.

    He lost his job at Britain's electronic eavesdropping agency Government Communications Headquarter after he was convicted of homosexuality and poisoned himself with cyanide at the age of 41.

    A GCHQ spokesperson said the agency was "delighted about the pardon".

    The pardon is a victory for supporters, including leading scientists such as Britain's Stephen Hawking, who have long campaigned to clear Turing's name.

    Britain's prime minister in 2009, Gordon Brown, issued a posthumous apology to the code-breaker, saying he had been treated terribly.

    But the government rejected a call to grant an official pardon last year on the grounds that Turing was properly convicted of what was then a criminal offence.

    More than 37,000 people signed an online petition last year calling for a pardon.

    Pardons are usually only granted in Britain when the person is innocent of the offence and when it is requested by someone with a vested interest, such as a family member.

    Turing's pardon is extremely rare in that it has been granted despite neither of these conditions being met.

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  3. #2
    Senior member lego's Avatar
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    Re: Gay Man Breaks Enigma Code Saving Thosands Can't Be Save

    A bit late?

    You are a bit late posting about the royal pardon.
    The royal pardon, even more so, also came a bit late.
    Yes, grandpa, I know it used to be more fun 30 years ago...

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    Moderator christianpfc's Avatar
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    Re: Gay Man Breaks Enigma Code Saving Thosands Can't Be Save

    I vaguely remember this has been discussed here before, and the question was raised: what about all the other men who were convicted of homosexuality, are they still guilty?

    Britain's prime minister in 2009, Gordon Brown, issued a posthumous apology to the code-breaker, saying he had been treated terribly.
    Should I or should I not? You could say the same about homosexuals who were sent to concentration camps in Germany during WWII: sorry, you were treated terribly. The mindset is the same, it's just a different execution! (Touring losing his job after conviction of homosexuality and being chemically castrated vs concentration camp)

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    Re: Gay Man Breaks Enigma Code Saving Thosands Can't Be Save

    India is currently reviewing it's law against "Homosexuality".
    "In the land of the blind the one eyed man is king"

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    Senior member lego's Avatar
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    Re: Gay Man Breaks Enigma Code Saving Thosands Can't Be Save

    It's actually a good point that several former British colonies that still have laws criminalizing gay sex owe them to their colonial past (hadn't had such laws before). It's a monster the Brits created that isn't easily stamped out.
    Yes, grandpa, I know it used to be more fun 30 years ago...

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    Senior member Mancs's Avatar
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    There was no toxicology test on the apple.

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    Forum's veteran cdnmatt's Avatar
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    Wasn't the Engima code mainly broken due to the US Navy stealing one of the machines?

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    Good cryptography is designed in such a way that acquiring the device is not sufficient to decrypt messages. Getting a pre-war enigma (device) - they were commercially available - and one from a German submarine during the war was a good start to understand how the encryption works, but a lot more work was necessary to actually break the code.

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    Forum's veteran cdnmatt's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by christianpfc View Post
    Good cryptography is designed in such a way that acquiring the device is not sufficient to decrypt messages.
    Not completely, but it definitely gave the algorithm away, which was a huge step in the right direction.

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    Forum's veteran francois's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cdnmatt View Post
    Wasn't the Engima code mainly broken due to the US Navy stealing one of the machines?
    Engima machines were captured by British and Canadian forces but not the US Navy. There was a movie,U 571, which was a fictionalized version portraying the US Navy as capturing a U boat .

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