0 past simple and past participle of decrypt
1 to change electronic information or signals that were stored, written, or sent in the form of a secret code (= a system of letters, numbers, or symbols) back into a form that you can understand and use normally:
No individual agent or machine involved in the election should ever be able to tie a particular voter to a particular decrypted vote.
The data is only decrypted when an authorized user retrieves data from the cloud and the data is returned.
Such a scheme is called "undeniable", since once the government has validated the message they can not deny that it is the correct decrypted message.
Very slowly, using assorted techniques ranging from traffic analysis to defector information, more of the messages were decrypted.
The tape served to garble each letter typed, which could then be decrypted by a reverse procedure at the other end of the teletypewriter line.
Either the messages can not be read (i.e., decrypted) or someone else (with the lost grille) may be reading them.
This concludes the handshake and begins the secured connection, which is encrypted and decrypted with the key material until the connection closes.
This unit successfully decrypted, translated, and analyzed these foreign signals, and turned that raw information into useful intelligence reports during the course of the war.