0 present participle of encrypt
1 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.
But these privacy protections- stripping identifiers, assigning new ones, or encrypting information to protect privacy-cannot be expanded without adding costs.
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.
For example, encrypting a message reveals some information about the message to observers of the ciphertext (and it reveals the entire message to possessors of the deciphering key).
Medical details are encoded and means are being investigated for encrypting names in exchanges of data by computer and, in the longer term, eliminating the use of a name altogether.
In some groups, a member can be a sender that generates a data encryption key and encrypts it with the key encrypting key.
Signcryption provides the properties of both digital signatures and encryption schemes in a way that is more efficient than signing and encrypting separately.
In modern cryptographic language, the ring settings did not actually contribute entropy to the key used for encrypting the message.
Recently, the problem of encrypting data while preserving the properties of the entities got a recognition and newly acquired interest among the vendors and academia.