0 the act of making something less clear and less easy to understand, especially intentionally, or an instance of this:
They accused the White House of obstruction and obfuscation.
She criticized the company's deliberate obfuscation of its finances.
Myths, obfuscations, and lies have long enshrouded the disgraced leader.
Obfuscation gets you used to the idea that you do not have to provide real information about yourself.
Obfuscation is a technique by which code is transformed into a form that is semantically the same as the original program, but is difficult to extract meaning from.
Obfuscation will drastically reduce the size of the file, so data transfers between server and client will be fast.
Fighting your way through the bureaucratic obfuscation that surrounds the help available is no easy task.
More delays and obfuscation can be expected from the government.
To sum up, this book is very clearly written and presented throughout, and refreshingly free of jargon and conceptual obfuscation.
Lies and obfuscations could then be exposed, and discrepancies between stories exploited to telling effect.
As a consequence it becomes the victim of indecision, confusion and obfuscation.
Non-indexed programmes present opportunities for cutbacks by non-decision and are particularly vulnerable to obfuscation.
When scientists tried to overcome this obfuscation by directly addressing the mind-body question, they reached a variety of conclusions.