November 18, 2003

Shredded Stasi documents could be pieced together in five years

from The Register bq. The last secrets of the East German State Security Service (Stasi), torn into shreds and stored in 16,000 brown sacks, may soon be pieced together by a software program developed by the Fraunhofer Institute. bq. On Monday, the Institute said it would take five years to solve the world's biggest jigsaw puzzle electronically. If done by hand, the operation would take several hundred years. bq. After the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, Stasi agents at the Magdeburg archives were ordered by their chief Erich Mielke to destroy tens of thousands of files about (former) Stasi informants and their victims. But the agents were unable to find the transport needed to take away the shredded documents and create a huge bonfire. Fraunhofer is no slouch in the software business - they were one of the major players in the development of the MP3 standard. Posted by DaveH at November 18, 2003 10:27 AM