Anonymous ID: 8b3ff6 Feb. 28, 2019, 7:09 p.m. No.5442272   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2281 >>2458

AMERICAN BLACK CHAMBER

 

Came across this in some digging, putting it up for the Clock Fags and just general interest. Looks very interesting. Reading some of the excerpts, sounds like the same kind of operations and ethical questions being wrestled with today.

 

Maybe we can gain some comms insights? Any Anons have this book?

Anonymous ID: 8b3ff6 Feb. 28, 2019, 7:09 p.m. No.5442281   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5442272

Meant to add:

 

During the 1920s Herbert O. Yardley was chief of the first peacetime cryptanalytic organization in the United States, the ancestor of today's National Security Agency. Funded by the U.S. Army and the Department of State and working out of New York, his small and highly secret unit succeeded in breaking the diplomatic codes of several nations, including Japan. The decrypts played a critical role in U.S. diplomacy. Despite its extraordinary successes, the Black Chamber, as it came to known, was disbanded in 1929. President Hoover's new Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson refused to continue its funding with the now-famous comment, "Gentlemen do not read other people's mail." In 1931 a disappointed Yardley caused a sensation when he published this book and revealed to the world exactly what his agency had done with the secret and illegal cooperation of nearly the entire American cable industry. These revelations and Yardley's right to publish them set into motion a conflict that continues to this day: the right to freedom of expression versus national security. In addition to offering an expose on post-World War I cryptology, the book is filled with exciting stories and personalities.