0 to change electronic information or signals into a secret code (= system of letters, numbers, or symbols) that people cannot understand or use on normal equipment:
Your financial information is fully encrypted and cannot be accessed.
1 to put information into a special form so that most people cannot read it:
2 to protect private information by putting it into a form that can only be read by people who have the permission to do so:
Because of the completely public transmission, all messages that were to remain private had to be encrypted.
But these privacy protections- stripping identifiers, assigning new ones, or encrypting information to protect privacy-cannot be expanded without adding costs.
However, if program confidentiality is required during transmission, the code can be encrypted.
First, she invents a key, encrypts the known body with it, and checks whether the result matches the encrypted authenticator fetched from the network.
As she is encrypting herself in her weaving, her original text, and her writing on her boat, he is encrypting himself in writing the narrative of her secret desire.
Merlin becomes literally encrypted within the tree that holds him.
Therein he finds the charm by which he himself, and his anxieties of paternal power, are encrypted.
Tennyson's narratives encrypt paternal power in fraternal orders with an ambivalence that concurrently mourns and castigates paternal privilege enacted within fraternal spaces.