Close Menu
  • Tech Insights
  • Laptops
  • Mobiles
  • Gaming
  • Apps
  • Money
  • Latest in Tech
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT UpdatesTechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT Updates
  • Tech Insights
  • Laptops
  • Mobiles
  • Gaming
  • Apps
  • Money
  • Latest in Tech
TechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT UpdatesTechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT Updates
Home » Inside the Messy, Accidental Kryptos Reveal
Latest in Tech

Inside the Messy, Accidental Kryptos Reveal

adminBy adminOctober 24, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Jim Sanborn couldn’t believe it. He was weeks away from auctioning off the answer to Kryptos, the sculpture he created for the CIA that had defied solution for 35 years. As always, wannabe solvers kept on paying him a $50 fee to offer their guesses to the remaining unsolved portion of the 1,800-character encrypted message, known as K4—wrong without exception. Then, on September 3, he opened an email from the latest applicant, Jarett Kobek, which started, “I believe the text of K4 is as follows …” He’d seen words like this thousands of times before. But this time, the text was correct.

“I was in shock,” Sanborn tells me. “Real serious shock.” The timing was awful. Sanborn, who turns 80 this year, saw the auction as a way for someone to continue his work of vetting potential solutions while maintaining the mystery of Kryptos. He’d also been looking forward to getting compensated for his work. What came next was even more shattering. He quickly got on the phone with Kobek and his friend Richard Byrne, who gobsmacked him by reporting they did not find the solution by codebreaking. Instead, Kobek had learned from the auction notice that some Kryptos materials were held at the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art in Washington, DC. Kobek, a California novelist (one of his books is called I Hate the Internet), got his friend, the playwright and journalist Byrne, to photograph some of the holdings. To Kobek’s astonishment, two of the images contained a 97-character passage with words that Sanborn had previously dropped as clues. He was staring at the full unencrypted text that CIA and NSA codebreakers, along with countless academics and hobbyists, had sought for decades.

The secret of Kryptos was out of the artist’s hands, in the most humiliating way imaginable—Sanborn himself had mistakenly submitted it in readable form to the museum. For 35 years the Kryptos plaintext had been a summit that none had reached. Suddenly some had attained it—not by climbing to the peak but by hitching a ride to the top. Sanborn’s grand vision for a piece of art that illuminated the idea of secrecy itself was imperiled—as was the auction. Now he had to figure out what to do about it.

Enter: The Media

The initial phone call had been friendly. Kobek and Byrne insisted that they did not want to mess up the auction. After he hung up, Sanborn called the auction house. That’s when things started going sideways. As Sanborn tells me, “They said, ‘Listen, see if the guys will sign NDAs, and see if they’ll take a portion of the proceeds.’ And I said, ‘Oh geez, man, I don’t know about that. But I offered it.’”

Kobek and Byrne were uncomfortable with that arrangement and refused to sign. (RR Auction executive vice president Bobby Livingston didn’t comment on the legal issue but says of an NDA, “It’s something that would be comforting to our clients.”) Sanborn told them his intent was to get the Smithsonian to freeze the archives—which it did. He assumed Kobek and Byrne would stay silent. “If you don’t release it, you’re heroes to me,” Sanborn told them.

“I thought everything was OK,” he says, “And then all of a sudden [the journalist] John Schwartz calls me and says these guys want to publish it in The New York Times.” Kobek explains to me that they contacted Schwartz in part to relieve some legal pressure. “There was threat after threat being sent to us from the auction house’s lawyers, threatening to sue us for a multitude of things,” he says. (When I ask Livingston if his lawyers have been contacting Kobek, he says, “There’s lawyers talking to each other,” and adds that there may well be copyright concerns if Kobek and Byrne published the plaintext.) On October 16, Schwartz published his scoop, informing the world that the plaintext was out.

Sanborn tells me that Kobek shared the plaintext with Schwartz over the phone. When asked about this, Kobek says, “I cannot speak about that…I am under significant legal peril.” Schwartz says. “Once my editors decided it would not be revealed in the story, I deleted the text from my interviews file. I don’t know it.” (So don’t bug him.)

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

Taylor Swift’s New Documentary Is Reigniting the Magic of the Eras Tour for Me

December 15, 2025

AMD CEO Lisa Su Isn’t Afraid of the Competition

December 14, 2025

Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, December 14 (game #1420)

December 13, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Latest
  • Creative Commons announces tentative support for AI 'pay-to-crawl' systems | TechCrunch December 15, 2025
  • The highly-anticipated follow-up to Baldur’s Gate 3 is more Divinity, but it’s not technically Original Sin 3 December 15, 2025
  • Don’t wait for the Galaxy Buds 4 Pro — buy these Samsung earbuds instead December 15, 2025
  • Spotify confirms app freezing issue on Android; here’s a solution for you – Moneycontrol December 15, 2025
  • Microsoft’s tiny new Surface Laptop and Pro shrink in other ways, too – PCWorld December 15, 2025
We are social
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Techzlab.

Tags
AI AI browsers ai coding Anthropic Apple Apps artificial intelligence ChatGPT cybersecurity data centers Disney Donald Trump electric vehicles Elon Musk Equity evergreens EVs Exclusive gemini Google Grok In Brief iPhone matt mullenweg Meta Microsoft Netflix nvidia Openai Perplexity Pinterest renewable energy robotics siri Softbank Solar Power SpaceX Spotify TechCrunch Disrupt TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 Tesla Trump Administration Uber WordPress YouTube
Archives
Quick Link
  • Apps (351)
  • From the Editor (4)
  • Gaming (382)
  • Laptops (383)
  • Latest in Tech (379)
  • Mobiles (386)
  • Money (213)
  • Tech Insights (366)
Don't miss

Garmin just leaked its Vivosmart 6 tracker – and it might come with one major upgrade over its predecessor

December 15, 2025

Codex Mortis: World’s first game made completely by AI now on Steam – All details

December 14, 2025

11 Holiday Gifts Your Co-Workers and Employees Will Truly Appreciate

December 13, 2025
Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
© 2025 Techzlab.com Designed and Developed by WebExpert.
  • Home
  • From the Editor
  • Money
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.