GCHQ — Play the TURING Challenge! [Answer to Puzzle #1 & Clue to Puzzle #2]

“We can only see a short distance ahead, but we can see plenty there that needs to be done.”

Alan Turing (23 June 1912 – 7 June 1954)

March 25 2021 — To celebrate Alan Turing featuring on the new £50 banknote, GCHQ has created their hardest puzzle ever in his honour. Follow us on Twitter: @INTEL_TODAY

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“This is only a foretaste of what is to come and only the shadow of what is going to be.”

Alan Turing — Interview to The Times newspaper on 11 June 1949.

Alan Turing was a mathematician, cryptographer and pioneer of computer science who possessed one of the greatest brains of the 20th century.

His life was one of secret triumphs shadowed by public tragedy. It has been estimated that his work shortened the war in Europe by more than two years and saved over fourteen million lives.

A quick comment — GCHQ writes: “On the 8th June 1954, Alan Turing took his own life.”

This is a mistake. Turing’s housekeeper found him dead on 8th June 1954 but he had committed suicide the previous day.

The Turing Challenge

The Turing Challenge requires you to solve a string of puzzles which get increasingly difficult. Crack the answers to the first 11 puzzles which should give you 11 single words or names which you’ll need your very own Enigma simulator to decode! Ready?

Puzzle #1

The questions begin with a relatively straightforward crossword-style puzzle that starts by asking where GCHQ’s predecessor agency, where Turing worked, was based during the second world war. A two-word answer, nine letters then four, is required.

The stylistic 8s in the pattern above the bank building on the front of the note refer to Hut 8, one of the sections of GC&CS. Hence the importance of the 8th column below!

The answers to these questions are quite obvious but the result for the 8th column is already puzzling!

The answers to these questions are:

BLETCHLEY PARK

FIFTY POUNDS

POUND SIGN

GOVERNMENT

BANK OF ENGLAND

ALAN TURING

ENIGMA MACHINE

If you then selected the 8th letter of each answer, you obtain:

Answer 1 = EUGENIA

Keep in mind that you need to solve puzzles 1 to 11 in order to get a shot at the final meta-puzzle 12!

“The spy agency, which believes setting puzzles gives the public an insight into its surveillance work, said it thought the multi-part “Turing challenge” would take an experienced puzzler seven hours to complete.”

The Guardian (March 25 2021)

Puzzle #2

Sepia coloured bromide print portrait of Alan Turing taken on 29 March 1951
The portrait is by Elliott & Fry; a bromide print taken on 29 March 1951, one of three from the National Portrait Gallery collection
On a rich red background, 3 small bombe rotors are on the right, overlaid by a stack of old paper. On the paper are some of Turings diagrams and the following encoded message
... ........ .. .. ....... . -.. ; -
....... ....- ..... .. .. ....- .... , ..-
.. ..-.. .... ... ...-.-.. ........
-...... ..........

This one is not too difficult either. And GCHQ just gave us some serious HINT:

Here is a hint for puzzle two

-… -. . ..-. … …… -..

OK, I will give you an additional clue. Let us re-write the caption like this:

The portrait is by Elliott & Fry ; a

bromide print taken on 29 March 1951 , one

of three from the National Portrait

Gallery collection

Now, you should see some similarities with the ‘encrypted’ text. Good Luck!

“I believe that at the end of the century the use of words and general educated opinion will have altered so much that one will be able to speak of machines thinking without expecting to be contradicted.”Alan Turing

Puzzle #3

Coming soon… Stay tuned!

***** ***** ***** ***** *****

Bank of England unveils new £50 banknote

REFERENCES

Alan Turing — a short biography by Andrew Hodges

The Turing Challenge — GCHQ

GCHQ releases ‘most difficult puzzle ever’ in honour of Alan Turing — The Guardian

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GCHQ — Play the TURING Challenge! [Puzzle #1]

GCHQ — Play the TURING Challenge! [Update : Answer to Puzzle #1 & Clue to Puzzle #2]

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